Method and System with Multi-Tier Club Memberships for Discounted Buying on the Internet and at Store Locations

ABSTRACT

This invention relates to a method and system as a branded club product (goods and services) discounting membership, universal discount card technology, hardware infrastructure, operational and software corporate team amalgamation, seller and buyer critical mass, essential implementation and real-time operational approach to integrate internet e-commerce with in-store commerce in physical store locations, at the point of sale (POS) checkout at store registers, of initially hundreds and eventually thousands of sellers, electronically and operationally, launching and igniting a whole new generation of advertising, buying and selling.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No.12/842,283, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent applicationSer. No. 11/376,951, filed Mar. 16, 2006, which is acontinuation-in-part of PCT/US2004/030762, filed Sep. 17, 2004, whichclaims the benefit of priority based on U.S. Prov. Pat. App. No.60/503,599, filed Sep. 17, 2003 and U.S. Prov. Pat. App. No. 60/534,236,filed Jan. 5, 2004, all of which are hereby incorporated by referenceherein.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to a method and system as a branded club product(goods and services) discounting membership, universal discount cardtechnology, hardware infrastructure, operational and software corporateteam amalgamation, seller and buyer critical mass, essentialimplementation and real-time operational approach to integrate Internete-commerce with in-store commerce in physical store locations, at thepoint of sale (POS) checkout at store registers, of initially hundredsand eventually thousands of sellers, electronically and operationally,launching and igniting a whole new generation of advertising, buying andselling. This technology-based marketing and sales, method and system,Internet online and huge real-world offline integration conceptaddresses discounting in the vast consumer national and international,retail and wholesale, products and services marketplaces, utilizingindividually or collectively computer systems, the Internet, e-mail,electronic data interchange (EDI), television, telephone, mail,facsimile (fax), catalogs, magazines and newspapers.

BACKGROUND

The concept of sellers offering products (goods and services) to bepurchased by buyers has been a practice engaged in by both individualsand corporations over very many years throughout the world. New ideas topromote this process through marketing and advertising via the use ofmany different mediums is continually being addressed and developed tomaximize the efficiency and effectiveness of such interactions in thespecific area of shopping.

The overall competition from internet product and/or service sitescompeting in a relatively new industry presently address only 1.4% ofthe purchasing environment; whereas, 98.6% of all sales are presentlybeing completed in the real-world, at point-of-sale store locations.While the internet is important and will become increasingly moreimportant, at this point in time, the real-world area of sales holdssway over the true interests of sellers (merchants and manufacturers),buyers and financial institutions. These participants in the world ofbuying and selling would like to bring the great strengths of both ofthese elements together in a compatible and enhancing integration, buthave yet to do so. Sellers are all trying to reach the largest potentialaudience of potential buyers for the least cost and offer those buyersproducts at costs that will entice buyers to purchase those products.

The present top ten (10) Internet sites relative to their shoppingoffering areas combined had a May 2004 total audience of 74.72 million.Separately in millions for the “shopping” portions of these ten sitesaccording to the Nielsen/NetRatings in the Jul. 26, 2004 edition of TheWall Street Journal was Yahoo! Shopping (17.12), Shopping.com (15.73),BizRate (10.83), NexTag (8.11), MSN Shopping (5.73), PriceGrabber(4.54), Froogle (Google) (4.08), AOL Shopping (4.08), MySimon (3.01) andShoptoday.us (1.49).

Advertising revenues paid by merchants to be on these Internet sites,some making up to 98% of these service providers' overall gross incomes,is the life blood of these organizations. In 2003, Yahoo! and Googlecombined accounted for 40% of the overall total of 6.6 billion dollarsspent on Internet ads with their 1.650 billion dollar and 0.962 billiondollar respective gross revenues. In that same year, 2003, offline, realworld, print advertising and marketing efforts in magazines totaled 11.6billion dollars according to JupiterResearch, The Wall Street Journal,Jul. 27, 2004 edition. Internet advertising is proposed to equal printmagazine advertising in the year 2007 at 13.8 billion dollars and exceedprint ads in the year 2009 with 16 billion dollars compared to 15billion dollars—a lot of Internet ad spending for a relatively smallreturn.

Corporations presently advertise products on their own sites as well ason others including advertising on one or more of the following shoppingsearch engine sites: Amazon.com Shopping, AOL Shopping, BizRate, Froogle(Google) Shopping, MSN Shopping, MySimon, NexTag, PriceGrabber,Shopping.com, Shoptoday.us, Trilegiant Shopping (Shoppers Advantage,Netmarket.com and Travelers Advantage), Visa Shopping, and Yahoo!Shopping. These Internet ad revenue driven sites charge for adplacements and web site links. Revenue options include but are notlimited to “per click” charges that can range from $0.19 to $1.25, withor without a purchase being made, or require logo indication charges, orbill percentage of sale charges.

An article from Friday, Sep. 3, 2004, in The Wall Street Journal,Marketplace, Page A7, titled: “Shoppers Who Blend Store, Catalog and WebSpend More”. This article indicated quote: “A study by ForresterResearch recently found that customers who shop three different ways—instore, on Web sites and with catalogs—spend about four times more thancustomers who shop only through one of those channels. Similarly,customers who shop two different ways spend two to three times more thanthe single-channel consumer.” This was also found by consulting firm J.C. Williams Group working with J. C. Penney Co. Many consumers like tobe able to first check out items on the web before actually going to thestore to buy same. Those that do also tend to buy more at the store whenthey do go. The linking of online and bricks-and-mortar is whereretailers must direct their strategic planning to take advantage of thischanging customer phenomenon.

However, with the many thousands of web sites vying for attention, theimportance lies not only with merely being on the Internet but rather inbeing represented on a highly recognized, universally respected brandedInternet site that is capable of drawing the largest audience ofpotential shoppers to which merchants can then present their selectedpotential buying opportunities enticing those consumers to come toreal-world store locations. An individual does not have the time orinclination to view thousands of web site home pages

Smaller Internet sites with smaller audiences than the ten (10) largestoffer shopping searches (e.g., dealcatcher.com (coupons),sundaysaver.com (weekly store newspaper ad flyers),onlineclothingstores.com and clothes-coupons.com along with themarketing service Performics owned by DoubleClick) are all fringeapproaches attempting to capture a buyer market for the participatingsellers offering products for purchase. These sites are less expensivesites on which to advertise but also provide less seller productexposure.

Another Internet web site “Offer Zone” is presently being put forth byAmerican Express (AMX). Of the 61 companies, 25 are hotels, all of whicheither offer only 15% off their regular rates or a minimum of 15% offtheir rates. Expedia.com, Hotels.com, Travelocity.com, Priceline.com,Hotwire.com, etc. all are service providers addressing hotelaccommodations that offer far better values than 15%, ranging from 40%to 70% off the regular hotel rates. The VISA +Club Membership Venturewhile concentrating on other retail areas than hotels will fall into thelater group concerning such offerings. Also, included in the otherAmerican Express “Offer Zone” participants besides hotels are retailcompanies just offering “free shipping” depending upon the size of thepurchase or asking for one to join their own separate memberships orgiving discounts of 10%, 15%, 20% or 25% reductions withconditions—mostly by web or phone purchasing with only a few in-storeopportunities. The American Express “Offer Zone” uses the various AMXCredit Cards. Again, it does not even remotely encompass the approach,intention or implementation of the present invention discussed below.

Many individual sellers presently offer free in-store discount cards totheir customers that can be used in their own seller store locations toreceive discounts on certain selected products. Customers fill out ashort information card and are issued the discount card immediately,unless the cashing of checks by the customer will be desired, requiringadditional time for the seller to review qualifications.

These one level, free one seller (merchant) in-store location discountcards, not club memberships, can be received by any individual customerand are given to promote loyalty among their customers by offering somediscount opportunities when the cards are scanned at the checkoutregister prior, during or after ringing up purchases but before thefinal total. A customer can have a plurality of discount cards from aplurality of sellers, each one only valid at the individual stores ofthe specific issuing sellers. These cards are not affected by and can beused in conjunction with the present invention discussed below.

Financial institutions (banks) and some sellers issue credit cards (withor without rewards) and/or debit cards (with or without rewards). Thesefinancial instrument purchasing cards (e.g., Visa, MasterCard, AmericanExpress, Discover, Japan Credit Bureau (JCB), Diners Club, etc.) areused both on the Internet and at in-store locations to pay for theproducts (goods and services) offered by sellers. Rewards includingpoints, miles, products, etc. by using these cards for purchases atvarious seller locations and seller product types are a marketing andsales incentive by the issuing corporations for the cardholders to useindividual cards by receiving specific value. Some of these creditand/or debit cards are free and others have annual fees (e.g., $35, $55,95$, etc.). These cards are not affected by and can be used for thepayment of product purchases in conjunction with the present inventiondiscussed below.

In view of the above discussion, it should be evident that currentlythere are a wide variety of methods and devices that are available to awide variety of companies of different types that are designed to createincentives to increase consumer spending on a variety of levels. Whilethese existing methods and devices each have their respective areas ofeffectiveness, the methods and devices are largely disparate, are oftenduplicative, and generally fail to successfully operate in conjunctionwith one another in a manner that would effectively harness theopportunities associated with the integration of multiple channels ofsales/marketing/promotion. Therefore, it would be advantageous if a newmethod and system were devised that allowed for such multi-channelintegration.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present technology-based invention integrates the Internet onlineand the huge real-world, point of sale (POS) at in-store registers,offline, with a marketing and sales, method and system for discountingin the vast consumer, national and international, retail and wholesale,products (goods and services) marketplaces via product discount clubmemberships along with the discount club member cards.

The development of this concept includes the full operational elementsof this invention addressing such a unique and never before availabletotal method and system approach for multi-tier club memberships fordiscounted buying on the Internet and at store locations (e.g., bronzeclub, silver club, gold club and platinum club). Each tier would addressdifferent product types with each successively higher level tieroffering additional discounts than the tiers before along with the samediscount offers of the lower tier memberships.

The club membership venture concerning the potential purchasingmembership audience being vast, and demographic potential buyers towhich participating sellers (merchants) will be presenting both withinthe internet community as well as in the real world of commerce,expresses the potential impact of this unique concept. The start-up willincluded an enormous fully activated club product discount cardmembership number, all simultaneous on the initial launch date.

The online/offline integration concept itself, the actualimplementation/infrastructure along with the provider and userparticipants are all integral to the success of such a venture. Whiletruly addressing discounting, the intention is not to merely furtherdiscount seller advertised discounts but rather to offer a newadditional enormously valuable venue for marketing offerings to a hugeuniquely viable shopping orientated audience, who will then makepurchases in the many seller stores throughout the country.

As indicated, each major merchant participating in the launch of thisventure, will be partially to fully reimbursed, depending upon theseller operational requirements, for hardware/software/developmentcosts, which include the individual seller IT personnel time in workingwith the venture software development/implementation teams as requiredfor the integration and installation of the proposed base multiplediscount level software and/or ISO 8583 Loyalty Messaging Format (forexample) at the registers at the individual merchant's store locations.The system(s) would be tied into the individual seller controlled, clubproduct discount seller site page(s) on the Internet for real-time datainformation transfer and which, in turn, would be directly tied to theindividual merchant's own separate home page on their own Internet sitefor all other shopping offers.

In stark contrast to present shopping search sites that are seller adrevenue driven, the proposed club membership venture intends not tocharge major sellers (merchants) for advertising (special adsexcluded)—an enormous plus for the participating sellers, especiallywhen considering the vast and unequaled, purchasing audience beingproposed to be addressed. Revenues for the club venture will begenerated by the annual, renewable, club membership fees, which willbegin following an “initial” free three (3) month start-up period forthe members.

Corporations can present their discounting approach and reductionpercentages as are presently indicated in their ads without changing thediscounts or offering anything in addition to that already advertised.Or, along with present corporate offerings, which in themselves may bemost inviting, one, two or more items could be selected on occasion(e.g., once a week or once a month) in addition, as super special(s)directed solely to the vast club membership audience, as even a furtherincentive to bring them into their store locations. Specials can beshown to be offered for as little time as for one specific hour duringone specific day or for as long as is desired. The flexibility inmarketing is limited only by the imagination of the merchant.

Club members (buyers) can log onto the club product discount memberInternet web site and using their individual club member numbers andpassword can access the listings of corporations (sellers) either bycorporate logo, corporate name listing or product type to view discounts(e.g., discounts—20% to 55% off of the manufacturer suggested retail orlist prices plus free shipping or super discounts—over 55% to 90% off ofthe manufacturer suggested retail or list prices plus free shipping) asoffered by the sellers.

Additional information is available at the corporate logos such asindications of the date and number of the latest entries, the date anddiscount percent of present offerings and the date and time ofdiscounting availability (e.g., one week, one day, one hour, etc.).

Full individual product information is shown along with pricing,discounts and savings to the club members. Individual products, morethan one of the products, component products, out-of-stock, and waitlistofferings are available. Payments can be by credit card, debit card,check, money order or cash (at in-store registers). Purchases can be inthe full amount, by monthly time payments until paid in full, or layawayuntil paid in full.

Club buyer members can just view the Internet product discount offers bythe sellers to see what is presently available and then choose to godirectly to the actual seller store locations to purchase the selecteditems. Products at the in-store locations are available at the exactsame price as those shown on the sellers' Internet discount pages. Thesoftware program integrated into the sellers' host system (e.g., IBM,NCR, VeriFone, etc.) electronically transmits the data from the Internetto the resisters in real time. The club product discount cards havemagnetic authorization strips that are swiped at the checkout along witha bar code discount tier identifier to automatically give the clubmember the appropriate discount when scanned prior to, during or afterringing up the purchases but before the final total. The discounts areautomatically indicated on the buyer's register receipt. A manualapproach to give the club member the correct product discounts isavailable via individual item sheets with bar codes, coupons or manuallyentering the item discount at the register.

Financial institution review found no negativity in this method andsystem, agreeing with the importance of having the issuing bank name onthe card and indicating that they would like to be involved on apercentage of the annual membership fee revenues basis for additionalfinancial institutional marketing for the venture. Very important and aspreviously stated, these club cards are preferably discount cards only,not credit or debit cards with or without rewards. This therefore, doesnot negatively impact the present or future issued financial purchasingcards, but rather will increase the volume of cardholder purchasing,generating greater revenue for the individual credit and debit cardissuing financial institutions.

In addition, the club member product discount cards are totally separatefrom all of the present individual in-store merchant discount cards.Actual purchases will be made via credit cards (with or without rewardsincluding individual seller (merchant) cards), debit cards (with orwithout rewards), check cards, checks, money orders or cash.

In certain embodiments, the present invention relates to a method ofbuying and selling using club memberships as a basis for buyers toreceive discounts on purchases of products offered by sellers through atleast one of a computer system, the Internet, e-mail, electronic datainterchange (EDI), television, telephone, facsimile (fax), catalogs,magazines, newspapers, coupons, and mailings and additionally atin-store locations, where the products comprise either goods orservices. The method includes making a plurality of discounted productoffers from the sellers available to the buyers by integrating anInternet online channel of purchasing with real-world offline channelsof purchasing, and providing the club memberships and associatedmembership cards of the buyers to provide access to the integratedchannels and the discounted product offers from the sellers. The methodis further characterized in that the buyers who are club members haveaccess to a club Internet web site that allows the club members toaccess the discounted product offers on individual seller discount pagesfrom the sellers directly linked through seller logos or seller nameseither generally or by product category to the club Internet web sitewithout the buyers having to visit a multitude of seller sitesseparately and locate the individual seller discount pages from withininformation included on the seller sites.

Additionally, in certain embodiments the present invention relates to aclub membership product discounting system in which sellers advertisediscount product offers to buyers for purchase through an integration ofonline and offline channels. The system includes means for hosting,managing and operating a club membership Internet web site on which thesellers can advertise the discount product offers to the buyers throughlinks to discount pages from at least one of seller logos and sellernames. The system further includes means for indicating additionalimportant temporal product information at the seller logos prior toreceiving commands from the buyers to link to the discount pages, andmeans for allowing the respective sellers to add, remove and revise dataon the discount pages associated with the respective sellers. The systemadditionally includes means for linking to respective main web sites ofthe respective sellers from the respective discount pages, means forallowing the buyers to purchase discounted products online securely, andmeans for electronically transmitting discounted product data from thehosting means to seller in-store checkout registers.

Other objects and advantages of the invention, besides those discussedabove, will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from thedescription of the preferred embodiment which follows. In thedescription, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which forma part hereof, and which illustrate examples of the invention. Suchexamples, however, are not exhaustive of the various embodiments of theinvention, and therefore, reference is made to the claims that followthe description for determining the scope of the invention. That is, theparticular objects and advantages and other information provided above,and the description of the preferred embodiment and accompany drawingsdiscussed below, may apply to only some embodiments falling within theclaims and thus do not define the scope of the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows exemplary (AOLTW & VISA +Club) membership cards (Bronze,Silver, Gold & Platinum) in accordance with one embodiment of thepresent invention (P);

FIG. 2 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) text scenario breakdown of offeringareas for club card type (P);

FIG. 3 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) text scenario breakdown of offeringareas (2nd Page) (P);

FIG. 4 shows an exemplary text scenario of the ISP system on-line andoff the Internet (P);

FIG. 5 shows an exemplary text scenario of the ISP system on-line andoff the Internet (2nd Page) (P);

FIG. 6 shows an exemplary text scenario of the ISP System on-line andoff the Internet (3rd Page) (P);

FIG. 7 shows an exemplary diagrammatic scenario of the ISP systemon-line the Internet (P);

FIG. 8 shows an exemplary diagrammatic scenario of the ISP systemoff-line in a retail store (P);

FIG. 9 shows an exemplary (AOL.com) Internet home page (P);

FIG. 10 shows an exemplary (AOL.com) Internet home page w/+club memberno./password sign-in (P);

FIG. 11 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) discounted (D) corporate logos pagepossible (P);

FIG. 12 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) super discounted (SD) corporate logospage (2nd Page) (P);

FIG. 13 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) D & SD corporate logos page w/fullinternet screen (P);

FIG. 14 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) listing of D & SD covered areabreakdown (P);

FIG. 15 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) listing of D & SD covered areabreakdown (2nd Page) (P);

FIG. 16 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) listing of D & SD/magazines w/fullInternet screen (P);

FIG. 17 shows an exemplary (AOLTW/Sears) general all areas D & SDInternet site page (P);

FIG. 18 shows an exemplary (AOLTW/Sears) general all areas D & SDInternet site (2nd Page) (P);

FIG. 19 shows an exemplary (AOLTW/Sears) appliance/refrigeration SDInternet page (P);

FIG. 20 shows an exemplary (AOLTW/Sears) SD pricing Internet page (%below MSRP) (P);

FIG. 21 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) listing of D & SD/clothing, etc. withfull Internet screen (P);

FIG. 22 shows an exemplary (AOLTW) D & SD/clothing, etc. corp. logosw/full Internet screen (P);

FIG. 23 shows an exemplary (AOLTW/Sears) specific clothing area D & SDInternet site page (P);

FIG. 24 shows an exemplary (AOLTW/Sears) clothing pricing (% below MSRP)Internet site page (P);

FIG. 25 shows an exemplary (AOL) shopping comparative pricing Internetpage alternative (P);

FIG. 26 shows an exemplary credit card plus club membership card methodsof payment for purchases (P);

FIG. 27 shows an exemplary credit card plus club business membershipcard with business credit cards (P)

FIG. 28 shows an exemplary credit card plus club membership cardindividual credit/debit card examples (P);

FIG. 29 shows an exemplary credit card plus club membership card plusdiscount and/or payment cards (P);

FIG. 30 shows an exemplary CLUB card online and offline magneticstrip/barcode and smart cards (P);

FIG. 31 shows an exemplary CLUB card plus bronze, silver, gold andplatinum magnet strip/barcode cards (P);

FIG. 32 shows an exemplary credit card plus one card (discount withcredit) or two card membership offerings (P);

FIG. 33 shows an exemplary credit card plus one card/two card offeringcomparison—page two (P); and

FIG. 34 shows an exemplary club membership in-store advertisementexample (P).

FIG. 35 shows exemplary non-payment financial institution issued (MBNA,Chase, CapitalOne, Citi, Bank of America, Household Bank, Discover &American Express) Universal Preferred Customer +Club Platinum MembershipDiscount Cards in accordance with one embodiment of the presentinvention which provides dual advertising for both the financialinstitutions and the +Club Memberships (P);

FIG. 36 shows exemplary non-payment Chase Universal Preferred Customer+Club Membership Multi-level (Platinum, Gold, Silver & Bronze) DiscountCards in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention (P);

FIG. 37 shows an exemplary advertising page indicating the concept andshowing a generic Universal Preferred Customer +Club Membership Cardwith the slogan “Your Shopping Companion” (P);

FIG. 38 shows an exemplary tri-foldable advertising flyer for aCapitalOne +Club Platinum Membership & +Club Card (Outside Face) (P);

FIG. 39 shows an exemplary tri-foldable advertising flyer for aCapitalOne +Club Platinum Membership & +Club Card (Inside Face) (P);

FIG. 40 shows an exemplary advertising mailer announcing the forthcomingfree gift of a temporary CapitalOne +Club Platinum Membership (Front)(P);

FIG. 41 shows an exemplary advertising mailer announcing the forthcomingfree gift of a temporary CapitalOne +Club Platinum Membership (Back)(P).

FIG. 42 shows an exemplary +Club banner on a participating merchant'smain Internet site (i.e.: Sears) which provides reciprocal advertisingas the individual merchant actually advertises +Club memberships byhosting the required Internet link to the merchant's +Club discountsand/or super discounts they are offering to consumers (P).

FIG. 43 shows an exemplary +Club Membership Discounts page for apotential participating home improvement retailer (i.e.: The Home Depot)indicating the +Club identification appears throughout an individualmerchant's offering Internet pages (P).

FIG. 44 shows an exemplary graphic sphere signifying an initial optimalcritical mass of one hundred million (100,000,000) proven buyingconsumers (not just Internet users, viewers, social networkers orgarners) as a proposed initial number of members for a club to be themarketing and advertising targets by retailers and manufacturers usingthe method and system;

FIG. 45 augments the exemplary graphic in FIG. 44 by showing an initialpossible eleven (11) credit card and debit card issuing financialinstitutions (seven (7) banks and four (4) associations) as the proposedselectors of the initial one hundred million club member buyers fromtheir credit and debit cardholder members who presently hold onlineand/or offline relationships with these institutions;

FIG. 46 augments the exemplary graphic in FIG. 45 by showing an initialpossible thirty-two (32) retailers as the proposed providers of thespecially selected discounted products and services for purchase usingthe method and system by the one hundred million club member buyers onthe Internet and in the retailers' physical store locations along withthe retailers online and offline relationships with both the consumersand the financial institutions;

FIG. 47 augments the exemplary graphic in FIG. 46 by showing a smallersphere as the initial proposed club organization and an initial possibletwenty-three (23) plus other entities as the proposed method and systemdevelopers, integrators, implementers and suppliers along with theonline and offline relationships between the club and these vendors, theconsumers, the merchants and the financial institutions;

FIG. 48 shows an exemplary chart of participating entities involved invarious aspects of providing the club membership, universal marketing,advertising and sales method and system including the softwareapplication product providers (software and software developers, theapplication service provider and the IT infrastructure provider), theInternet search engine provider, the middleware providers (in-storeinfrastructure providers, in-store software providers and vendors andservice providers), the major credit and debit card manufacturers, thediscounted product providers (major card issuing banks and associations,major merchants and manufacturers) and consumers;

FIG. 49 shows an exemplary club participants, components andtransactions inter-relational overview graphic including the roles ofparticipating retailers, card issuing banks and associations, serviceproviders, and consumers addressing product viewing through actualproduct purchase scenarios operationally in both physical storelocations and on the club member Internet web site;

FIG. 50 shows an exemplary of three (3) non-payment discount access,bank name branded (e.g. Chase, Bank of America and Citi) universalpreferred customer, platinum club membership cards to be used by clubmembers when purchasing goods and services on the Internet online and instores offline, on the phone or using catalogs along with benefitsaccrued for the card issuing financial institutions' participation inthe method and system—all club cards optionally marketed as “YourShopping Companion”;

FIG. 51 shows an alternate exemplary club membership card front-facedesign as compared to those shown in the prior submitted FIG. 31, whichalso shows exemplary club cards including bronze, silver, gold andplatinum magnetic strip with barcode cards (P);

FIG. 52 shows exemplary alternate retail categories indicating potentialproducts or services proposed to be offered with discounted and superdiscounted pricing under each of the four (4) club card types (e.g.Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum) as compared to that shown in theprior submitted FIG. 2, FIG. 3, FIG. 14 and FIG. 15.

FIG. 53 shows an alternate exemplary club membership card front-facedesign as compared to that shown in the prior submitted FIG. 29, whichalso shows exemplary club membership cards used with credit cards, debitcards, discount cards and other payment types (P)—as the club cards aretypically non-payment instruments with credit cards, debit cards,merchant cards, gift cards, checks, money orders or cash being theactual payment instruments;

FIG. 54 shows an exemplary alternate use of a diagonal band color (e.g.blue or purple) on the front and/or of placing a name/logo (e.g. RedYahoo! or White “Y” in purple oval with purple!) of the club sitehosting Internet search engine provider (e.g. Yahoo!) on the back of theclub membership cards;

FIG. 55 shows an exemplary comparison of typical loyalty/reward programsrelative to such offerings as points on qualifying purchases, redemptionof points, 1% cash back, 2% rebates on eligible gas, travel and diningpurchases, etc. using any of the multiple payment cards as compared tothe additional possible substantial benefits to the cardholders by usingthose payment cards in concert with the immediate significantly larger5% to 90% product and service discounts and super discounts atparticipating retailers' points of sale at time of purchase, as would beavailable to club members using the one universal preferred customerclub discount access, non-payment card approach;

FIG. 56 shows exemplary bank loyalty reward card programs' benefitsdilution due to cardholders using multiple cards for purchases asopposed to selecting just one payment card, for benefits accumulateseparately on each card, not collectively between payment cards. Also,shown is a general club membership non-payment card advantage statementwith the payment for purchases being made by credit card, debit card,merchant card, reward card, gift card, check, money order or cash;

FIG. 57 shows an exemplary of universal platinum club membership cardsissuer name branded by eleven (11) card separate issuing financialinstitutions (e.g. Listed alphabetically: American Express, Bank ofAmerica, CapitalOne, Chase, Citi, Discover, HSBC, MasterCard. US Bank,Visa, and Wells Fargo) along with a proposed number of free temporaryclub membership cards determined to be issued, optimally at the club'sexpense, by each bank or association out of the initial proposed onehundred million temporary club cards at method and system launch, basedupon the issuing institutions' individual market shares of the totalissued and presently active credit card and debit card accounts;

FIG. 58 shows an exemplary of a sequential text diagram showingcomparisons of both Internet online and in-store offline club memberverses non-club member multiple steps from product viewing to productpurchase shopping scenarios;

FIG. 59 shows exemplary in-store club member consumer's registerreceipts showing a product, the club membership discount and the totalsavings or a product, the club membership discount along with bothadditional separate retailer and card issuer discounts applied and thetotal savings on the purchase;

FIG. 60 shows an exemplary of a club member's personal monthly discountshopping activity page summary indicating the name of the retailers andmanufacturers along with the products, retail price, club price, percentsaved, amount saved and dates of purchase. A member can see the totalmonthly saving and the savings to date, which can then be compared tothe annual club membership fee to understand the actual net savingsreceived up to that point in time;

FIG. 61 shows an exemplary retailers' and manufacturers' products,brands and service rating format which includes a comment section forclub members to further address individual retailer's and manufacturer'sproducts, brands and service;

FIG. 62 shows an exemplary club member shopping discussion forum. Thisis an important social networking aspect in a spread sheet formatallowing for club members to truly interact with each other in an opencomment, response, rating venue, addressing all areas of their shoppingexperiences (e.g. retailers, manufacturers, brands, products,advertising (text and videos), services, discounts, upcoming/prior saleevents, club activities, etc.);

FIG. 63 shows an exemplary of logos of thirteen (13) proposed retailersalong with some of the proposed benefits accruable to retailers andmanufacturers participating in the method and system;

FIG. 64 shows an alternate exemplary club Internet web site Home Pagewith club member information, coveted advertiser presentation locations,and club member number/password sign-in card allowing the members toreceive the merchant and manufacturer discounts and super discounts,along with optionally offering an additional incentive to signing in,for that by doing so would automatically, once per day, generateindividual member entries for monthly drawings to award member prizes.All shopping departments are indexed at the left margin to allow forease in immediately accessing the specific areas of interest for theclub members. Specially rewarded merchants selected by the club for thebeing among the best in discount offerings participation (e.g. JC Penneyand Kohl's) are given prime club home page advertising video placement.This exemplary alternative can be compared to that shown in the priorsubmitted FIG. 10, which shows an exemplary (AOL.com) Internet home pagewith a club member number/password sign-in (P) and to the shoppingdepartment indexing as compared to that shown in prior FIG. 14 and FIG.15;

FIG. 65 continuing down from the home page indicated in FIG. 64 shows analternate exemplary club specially selected corporate retailers' andmanufacturers' logos for exemplary product and service discountofferings participation, rewarded with positioning around a club sphereon this page w/full Internet screen as compared to that shown in theprior submitted FIG. 13, which shows an exemplary (AOLTW) D & SDcorporate logos page w/full Internet screen (P);

FIG. 66 shows an alternate exemplary club Internet Home Page as in FIG.64 showing an additional shopping department indexing detail listingunder Health & Beauty. Each of these areas can also have further indexeddetail listings to direct a member to a specific area of interest ascompared to that shown in prior FIG. 16 and FIG. 21;

FIG. 67 shows an exemplary Men's Grooming page, arrived at by firstselecting Health & Beauty along with Hair Care in FIG. 66, showing six(6) different electric razors, five of which are discounted andavailable at retailers (e.g. Wal*Mart, Kohl's & Target) and one which isavailable directly from a manufacturer (e.g. Remington);

FIG. 68 shows an exemplary manufacturer page (e.g. Remington), arrivedat by a “click” on Remington in FIG. 67, showing a discounted electricrazor along with a product description and pricing information. Thiswill allow manufacturers to sell directly to the public, bypassingretailers;

FIG. 69 shows an exemplary Microsoft Bing search engine results pageadvertising by retailers along with club discounts under two areas ofsponsored results for Women's Clothing (Shop and find all brands ofWomen's Clothing at discounted prices) and Shop Women's Clothing (Shopall Styles and Brands in Ladies Fashion at Discounted Prices), both athttp://www.plusclubinternational.com;

FIG. 70 shows an exemplary club shopping page (e.g. Women's Clothing) asbeing hosted by Microsoft's Bing with six (6) merchants with a freelisting “gifted” by the club and the Internet search engine provider(e.g. Microsoft) for retailers and manufacturers;

FIG. 71 shows an exemplary club Internet merchant (e.g. Target) page,arrived at by a “click” on Target on FIG. 70, offering a discountedproduct (e.g. V-Neck Dress) to club members describing the product andindicating savings and instructions to purchase, headed with a clubbanner and Internet search engine provider (e.g. Microsoft's Bing);

FIG. 72 shows an alternate exemplary club Internet web site banner linkon a merchant's Internet Site Home Page (e.g. Target) showing theInternet search engine provider (e.g. Microsoft's Bing). A “click” onthis banner would take one to the merchant's present specially selectedclub product or service discounts and super discounts. This alternatebanner is compared to those shown in the prior submitted FIG. 23 (e.g.Sears), FIG. 42 (e.g. Sears) and FIG. 43 (e.g. The Home Depot) asindividual retailer home pages;

FIG. 73 shows an alternate exemplary retailer's (e.g. Target) women'sdress page with four dress offers with club discounts off the retailprice along with the percentage saved;

FIG. 74 shows one of many exemplary manufacturer (e.g. Proctor & Gamble,P&G) Internet Beauty & Grooming site pages listing their brands. Theinclusion of club logos placed at the individual brands would be oneoptional method to indicate those brands providing product discounts forthe club's members, selling directly to the public, bypassing retailers;

FIG. 75 shows an exemplary of the possible unparalleled trackingcapabilities of club members' shopping interests and actions, onlypossible through the use of club member numbers and passwords, which themembers will enter on the club Internet Home Page sign-in card, allowingretailers to judge the true effectiveness of their Internet marketingand advertising offers by following individual club member's viewing ofspecific retailer (e.g. Target) products on the Internet and then seeingthose same products being purchased by that individual club member inthat specific retailer's physical store location—or in some cases, evenin a competitive retailer's store location;

FIG. 76 shows an exemplary participating club merchants' (e.g. Best Buy,Target, Staples, The Home Depot, GAP and JC Penney) selections ofadvertising videos Internet web site page. Each participating merchantindicates the number of professional videos (e.g. 4P), amateur videos(e.g. 2A) and amateur Haul Videos along with permitting amateurs tosubmit ads they have created to the individual merchants for theirreview and determination of whether that merchant desires to then postthose amateur video ads on this site for viewing by club members andnon-club members; however, only club members can rate and comment onboth the professional and amateur videos;

FIG. 77 shows an exemplary club individual merchant's (e.g. JC Penney)professional (e.g. 4P) and amateur (e.g. 1A) advertising video and HaulVideos selection page showing what the ad videos are about, the lengthof the videos, the number of views, the number of ratings along with oneto four stars for video quality and popularity. “Click” on the video andyou would go to the video-viewing page;

FIG. 78 shows an exemplary club Internet web site merchant's (e.g. JCPenney) advertising video-viewing page. Club members and non-clubmembers can view the ads, but only club members can rate the videos(e.g. excellent, good, fair, poor), after entering the club member'snumber for identification—the running totals for each of these ratingsare indicated. The subject matter of the video, the number of views andthe number of ratings are shown. Also, a club member may comment on thevideo as well as view the comments of others; and

FIG. 79 shows as exemplary summary of three possible areas for marketingby the Internet search engine provider (e.g. Microsoft's Bing), the cardissuing banks (e.g. CapitalOne), individual retailers (e.g. Target) ormanufacturers and club itself both online by way of the club Internethome page, on the retailers' Internet home pages and offline on thefront or back of the club membership cards.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a WIN/WIN/WIN CONCEPT FOR: INTERNETSERVICE PROVIDER(S) (ISP) & NON-ISP CORP.(S); PARTICIPATING PRODUCT &SERVICE VENDORS/RETAILERS; and CLUB MEMBERS (non-paying (initial) andpaying subscribers). Throughout this embodiment including the diagrams,ISP (or any AOL, AOLTW or VISA example) includes any ISP and/or anynon-ISP corporation offering an Internet site platform/portal capable ofproviding for the Marketing/Sales Method & System of the presentinvention. Also, it should be noted that any SEARS example includes anyparticipating corporations including, e.g., retail & wholesale (corp.)discounts & super discounts. Further, it should be noted that the CLUBMEMBERS can includes individuals & small/medium/large corporations.

The Marketing/Sales Method and System using Club Memberships provides a“Neutral, Vendor Platform” and a “Specialized, Internet Portal” for theavailable multiples of competing, responsible and reliable vendorsand/or service providers in an almost unrestricted variety of legitimateareas to advertise the offering of special “discounts” (e.g., 20% to 55%plus Free Shipping) and/or “super discounts” (e.g., over 55% to 90% plusFree Shipping) from the Standard List or the Manufacturer's SuggestedRetail Price (MSRP) on provider selected products and/or services. Thisis not merely a typical aggregation of corporate names withvendors/retailers' products and/or services offered in side-by-sidecomparisons of type, quality, price, etc. or the typical listing ordisplay of corporate named links/connections to the general, individualproduct or service providers internet sites that a person might verywell already know and could therefore enter their separate sites totallywithout the use of the concept. Rather it is a single, real-time sourceand platform for multitudes of participating retailers, serviceorganizations, etc. to advertise their present and/or future enticingdiscount and super discount offerings to a very large audience ofdemographically targeted members and potential purchasers. Afterchecking out the true specials, the individuals may very well enter therest of the corporations' individual Internet sites to view their otherofferings available to the general public. This one neutral, collective“discounting” location is a unique, highly interactive, product andservice information communication, marketing and sales tool betweenvendors and buyers. This method and system replaces the need for anindividual to search hundreds and even thousands of individual corporateInternet sites to find such discounts, which is not only extremelytime-consuming but by the very nature of such a process is for allpractical purposes impossible, along with integrating these almostunlimited number of Internet offerings on the aforementioned multitudeof sites with those of the physical world at individual store locationsfor the same products and services. (See FIGS. 1 through 25.)

An operational Method and System “Text” Scenario indicates both anInternet (on-line) and a retail store location (off-line) or call inrequest (off-line) to television, store, etc. offer approach. (See FIGS.4, 5 and 6 which, in turn, refer to additional figures for furthermethod and system explanation.)

An operational method and system “diagrammatic” scenario indicates anInternet (on-line) approach. (See FIG. 7 which, in turn, refers toadditional figures for further method and system explanation.)

An operational method and system “diagrammatic” scenario indicates aretail store location (off-line) or call in request (off-line) totelevision, store, etc. offer approach. (See FIG. 8 which, in turn,refers to additional figures for further method and system explanation.)

The method and system will employ “independent”, ISP/ServiceProvider/Product Supplier/Manufacturer/Travel/Entertainment, etc.driven, single or multi-level ISP +club memberships (e.g., Bronze,Silver, Gold and Platinum). (See FIG. 1 for certain exemplary membershipcards.)

The products and/or services discounts and super discounts offered bythe participating vendors and service providers are presented“exclusively” to the ISP club members or alternatively to othercompeting ISPs' club members, if those ISPs, too, are permitted throughlicensing to use the method and system.

Instantaneous critical mass of both subscribers and participatingvendors is absolutely necessary at the launch date(s) for the greatestsuccess of such a venture; as subscribers will not be satisfied witheither just a few vendor participants and/or just a few discounted orsuper discounted offerings, and, in turn, vendors will neither becompelled nor will take the time and the effort to offer substantialdiscounts and/or super discounts for just a few subscribers.

To obtain the initial critical mass of subscribers with “limited” or“standard” club memberships, these club memberships would besimultaneously “gifted” to all of the subscribers of the ISP providingthe marketing and sales method and system. This would immediatelyinclude many millions of individuals. These subscribers neither ask fornor sign up for the initial memberships. All of the necessary memberinformation is already on file with the ISP that the subscribers areusing for internet access. The method of choice for informing thesubscribers of their individual memberships is by e-mail. (This could bereinforced through a mass mailing option.) All subscribers are addressedwith the mass e-mail program in which computer-generated club membershipnumbers and passwords are sent with a brief description of the upcomingdiscount and super discount vendor offering opportunities. No clubmembership cards would need to be issued during the initial severalmonth “gifted” period.

To obtain the initial critical mass of product and service vendorproviders, the ISP would approach the existing vendors alreadyparticipating in the ISP's existing shopping and/or travel offeringsnetwork(s). In addition, other corporations would be approached with theopportunity of advertising to the new huge subscriber audience createdwith this unique marketing and sales concept.

The ISP should heavily advertise the upcoming event of the ISP +clubmembership offering prior to e-mailing to all ISP subscribers theirlimited or standard “gifted” several month ISP +Platinum Club membershipnumber and password as well as after the mass e-mail effort. (A PlatinumClub membership would give the ISP subscribers access to the entirerange of offerings as opposed to a lesser value membership, so that thesubscribers can later decide whether nor not to continue with a “paid”membership at the time that the initial “gifted” period ends and theirinitial membership expires.) This major advertising promotion willinsure both widespread subscriber and vendor participation and result ina financial bonanza for the ISP, as well as raise the bar in “shopping”environments, making it very difficult for competitors to follow.

The club memberships can preferably be divided into multiple types toprovide different offering opportunities depending upon the cost of theindividual membership, such as ISP +Bronze, ISP +Silver, ISP +Gold andISP +Platinum Club memberships. With separate membership types, variousvalues and areas of products and/or services would be available witheach of the different memberships the higher cost memberships wouldinclude additional offerings along with the offerings of the lesservalue memberships. (See FIGS. 2 and 3.)

For ISP subscribers wishing to continue with the ISP +Platinummembership or one of the other three memberships (Bronze, Silver orGold), after the several month “gifted” period expires, a monthly feewould be assessed and an actual MEMBERSHIP CARD issued along withallowing the member to select a new PERSONALIZED password, if one sodesired.

Club memberships allow the holders not only to take advantage ofofferings on the Internet but also to take advantage of offerings at therespective individual vendor's retail establishments, restaurants,service organization, etc. locations throughout the country or world.Any available ISP +club site Internet discount offering on a product orservice would automatically be applied, at the time of the purchase ofthe same product or service, at the register of the retail location(s)when the club card, or appropriate club card if there are membershiptypes, is electronically read or “swiped”, whether or not the clubmember is aware of the offered discount or super discount on theInternet. This will finally truly integrate the “virtual” and “real”day-to-day worlds. (See FIGS. 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.)

ISP/Vendor “discount” and “super discount” site pages would beaccessible only through the ISP's club membership pages which, in turn,would be accessed either from the ISP's site or directly from theindividual vendor's/retailer's/etc. own site/home page/etc. withoutfirst going to the ISP home page or other ISP sites. The latter willbring up the ISP +club site requiring the member number and password;however, once the member has finished viewing the offerings and possiblepurchasing there, the member can then return to the corporation'sInternet pages but, respecting the individual corporation, not to thefull ISP discount and super discount pages, protecting the participatingcorporation from having members go to other competing providers or otherofferings through their own site, unless that corporation does not findsuch movement objectionable. If the member had accessed the corporationby first going through the ISP sites, then the member would have fullaccess to all of the other participating corporations' discount andsuper discount as well as standard Internet sites directly. Also, clubmembers' selections by either the individual companies' logos (see FIGS.11, 12, 13, and 22) or by the companies' names under the “item”directories (see FIGS. 14, 15, 16, and 23) will only bring up thediscount pages and not proceed directly to the individual vendors' homepages. And, after a club member arrives at the individual ISP/vendordiscount page(s), the individual vendor's home page can then be reacheddirectly or returned to, if the original discount site access came fromthere, to view the other vendor's offerings as presented to the generalpublic.

This new approach will be separate from and in addition to, not insteadof, the present offerings by the ISP. This offering is truly unliketypical ISP shopping, or ISP travel offerings which, in effect, merelymirror the offerings of almost all of the other ISPs and/or otherindividual product or service vendors, relative to actual savings.

The system & method is not just a series of controlled single-dayofferings at certain times of the year but rather a continuous everyday, all-year discounting effort, offering within its format, specificday or hour specials. This new concept creates a very dynamicplatform/portal with participating vendors/service providers constantlychanging/modifying/adding/deleting the ISP +club member offerings. Thisentices the members to check the sites often so as not to miss any trulyunique opportunities to save—not waiting for some sporadic advertisedsales event by a selected list of non-competing retailers on asemi-static shopping site with very few real discountedproducts/services.

It should be further noted that vendors totally control their owndiscounts and super discounts and the pages on which they are presented,indicating custom, or many, or one of a kind items, or services, and/orlimited time offers, and/or combination offers, and/or out of stock/waitlist (date) items, and/or lay-a-way, and/or any other manner of productsor services as well as flexible payment arrangements to entice the ISP+club members. (Due to the great value deals, individuals may wellchoose to purchase even though they were not looking for a particularitem or service-true “impulse” buying.)

Vendors that are not interested in providing discounts or superdiscounts on their products or services will not appear either by logoor item listings within the ISP +club membership sites. However, vendorsthat are interested will appear under item listings and, if they choose,also separately with their company logo. The logo may appear fixed,flashing, moving, enlarging, etc. with or without relevant dates for themost recent added item(s) (“latest”), length of discount period(“until”) or specific limited day discounts (“only”) can be indicated bythe vendors providing club members with all important timinginformation, if they wish to review items for purchase (e.g.: latest:Jun. 4, 2003, 18 Items; until: Jun. 20, 2003, 40% to 50%; and/or only:Jun. 15, 2003, 10 AM to Noon). (See FIGS. 13 and 22.) In any case,vendors may also appear on any or all of the other ISP shopping sitesand/or ISP travel sites.

Vendors offering only discounts or super discounts on very inexpensiveitems (e.g., $1 off a $5 item) when they sell many high priced items,just to entice ISP +club members to their site, will be dropped frompresenting offers, for it undermines the spirit and intent of theconcept by trying to skirt their obligation to offer truly substantialdollar values for the “privilege” of having their names seen on thesesites by such a huge audience of potential buyers even though they wouldhave to pay to advertise on the sites.

An important note is that the ISP +club membership sites are open to all“qualified” product and/or service vendors. The ISP solely reserves theright to determine what vendors meet the required qualifications to beplaced on these sites for viewing by their membership. Quality,reliability, integrity, delivery and warranties of offerings are just afew in the overall list of necessary parameters for vendorparticipation.

The neutral platform will allow multiple vendors in multiple areas todecide on their unique strengths and abilities to offer the specialdiscounts and super discounts. No individual store or entity, not eventhe largest retail chains, would be able beat or even match the vastarray of potential offerings that can be put forth by such a widevariety of vendors of untold products and/or services. All qualifiedvendors will be welcome in all areas. (One specific example in anon-asset based service industry involved in travel and related serviceofferings separate from the individual asset based provider companieswould include companies such as Expedia.com, Hotels.com, Orbitz.com,Priceline.com, Travelocity.com, Hotwire.com, CheapTickets.com, etc.)

With the eventual widespread use of the ISP +club membership cards atindividual vendors' physical store locations as indicated above, the ISPwill become a major world discounting leader with a base so large thatother competing ISPs, without the use of the present method and system,will find it difficult to hold the interest of their shoppingsubscribers.

The ISP becomes a vendor itself in the ISP +club membership scenario,able to promote through special limited or individual month, second athalf price or free, etc. discounts on the ISP's own products and/orservices.

The ISP can also promote its ISP VISA card (if one is offered by theISP) to handle the transactions through the ISP +club environment byoffering “extras” that are not available through other VISA, MasterCard,Discover, American Express, etc. cards with those organizations.

Product and service offers can include custom, one or many of a kind,limited time, combinations, wait-listed or out-of-stock, etc. inaddition to the more standard approach. Also, the products and servicescan be purchased by credit card, check, money order, cash (at a storeregister), etc. and either outright, multiple payments, layaway, etc.giving the members numerous options that can be tailored to theirindividual situations.

Since ISP +club memberships only address the special discounts and superdiscounts on specific vendor offerings (unless other lesser, wider basedofferings are added), any existing other ISP shopping and/or ISP travelofferings will remain viable and valuable services in the ISP corporatefamily for interested subscribers. The actual discounts on these othersites could also indicate the percent discount from the list or MSRP, sothat the members would be able to realize their actual savings. (SeeFIG. 25.)

The ISP will hold sway over other ISPs with these unique discount andsuper discount shopping content sites not incorporating this discountapproach. Subscribers who use other ISPs will have to participatethrough “bring-your-own-access” to the ISP using this service or loseout on the great deals. The “extra” monthly fees might well make thosesubscribers decide to just switch to the ISP offering the method andsystem. And eventually, those that are not with any ISP might welldecide to join the ISP when they see ISP +club members checking out inline in front of them receiving the automatic discounts at the samestores and on the same items that they are paying full or higher prices.

As already discussed, the present method and system in variousembodiments can provide ISP +club memberships and/or non-ISP +clubmemberships, and can allow a variety of different possible membershiptypes such as, for example, Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum membershiptypes both on-line and off-line. The method and system can allow fordiscounted and super discounted pricing for a variety of specificproducts, hotels, travel, services, etc., some or all of which may beseparate from and/or in addition to any existing ISP shopping offerings,ISP travel offerings, or other offerings.

The implementation of this business concept will position the ISP as aneutral, price sensitive, quality Internet destination venue ormarketplace/portal for a most truly diversified range ofretail/wholesale, products/services on-line offerings, which are alsoavailable off-line at the individual participants' physical locations,whether or not the member(s) were first aware of the Internetoffering(s). Due to the unique nature of this concept, ISP competitorswill be hard pressed to replicate the success of this approach, whichwill generate substantial annual revenue for the ISP entity.

The potential advertising bonanza for participating providers of goodsand services through this club membership approach is almost unlimited.Solid discounting and/or super discounting of items will direct membersto their individual discount/super discount pages and then to theindividual product buy pages with percentage discounted pricing from themanufacturers' suggested retail prices (MSRP) along with price andsavings comparisons. From these pages the club members can be directedinto the providers' own individual sites for additional salesopportunities on other goods and/or services before returning to theclub membership site. Advertising to such a large audience of millionsof members will justify substantial advertising revenue to the ISP alongwith the revenue generated from both the new membership fees and thepotential additional sales of other ISP goods and services through thisventure. These new areas of revenue will provide an enormous capitalinfusion into the ISP entity along with a tremendous growth period bothin size and valuation for the corporation. The ISP can hold sway overits rivals as they struggle to meet the new high bar in this fiercelycompetitive Internet industry.

An extremely intensive and continuous marketing effort must be supportedby the ISP to allow sufficient personnel to contact and adequateresources to deliver the message to both present and potential futureprovider participants. The success of this major integration of thevirtual Internet and real world buyers' marketplace environment of amultitude of providers, across a very broad spectrum of goods andservices, is to present both discounting as well as super discounting onthe costs of their individual offerings. This will create a never beforeseen or even contemplated assemblage—a truly grand amalgamatedmarketplace with outstanding pricing, a buyer's dream.

Also as discussed above, in certain embodiments the present method andsystem will involve a new marketing/sales method and system concept inwhich the ISP (and/or non-ISP) possibly e-mails and/or mails (orotherwise communicates) to all present ISP subscribers and/or cardholders offering an enormous discounted buyers marketplace opportunity,in which a gift is provided from the ISP to all its ISP subscribersand/or card holders.

The ISP is giving a unique gift to all its subscribers/card holders,both individuals and/or organizations, by providing an opportunity forboth product/travel/hotel/service/etc. suppliers to offer specialdiscount and super discount pricing to all its subscribers who, in turn,will benefit by the savings obtained on purchases during an initialmultiple month free trial club membership period.

In certain embodiments, the ISP would offer four (4) club membershiptypes (see FIG. 1, showing cards for different types). Namely, thesetypes would be the following: ISP +Bronze Club membership (see FIG. 2);ISP +Silver Club membership (see FIG. 2); ISP +Gold Club membership (seeFIG. 2); and ISP +Platinum Club membership (see FIG. 3). The gift wouldbe a limited*ISP +Platinum Club membership, effective immediately, withan appropriate member number and password. For example, a member mightbe assigned a member number of 286 49973311 and a password of AFYS9987(see FIG. 10 for a sign-in screen). These new +club memberships foron-line and off-line use would be in addition to and separate from anypresent ISP shopping, ISP travel, etc. offerings.

Following a possible three month (more or less) initial free membershipperiod, the gifted ISP +Platinum Club membership will automaticallyexpire. Should the member wish to continue with the Platinum Club orwish to choose the Bronze, Silver or Gold Club memberships, the memberwill have to contact the ISP. At that time, the member would be sent aclub membership card and could select a new personalized password. Thiswould then allow an individual or organizational member to continue toreceive club member savings on future purchases and services. Thelimited multiple month club membership might not include discounts onother services, benefits, perks, fees, access charges, etc. offered bythe ISP.

FIGS. 4-7 further show an ISP marketing/sales method and systeminvolving an ISP +club member system use scenario on-line (Internet)and/or off-line (physical store location). FIGS. 4-6 in particular showan on-line and off-line text scenario, while FIG. 7 in particular showsan Internet (on-line) diagrammatic scenario and FIG. 8 shows a retailstore location (off-line) diagrammatic/text scenario.

Describing a use of the marketing/sales method and system, an ISP +clubmember either logs onto the Internet from a computer or other electronicdevice or the member enters the physical store location of a particularInternet participating ISP +club vendor or service provider. If themember chooses the Internet approach, the individual can go to theInternet home page of the ISP provider (see FIG. 9). From there, one canproceed to the general ISP +club site (see FIG. 10). A non-club memberor a club member who wishes to upgrade to a higher membership can seethe benefits and services offered under each of the different clubmembership types (see FIGS. 2 and 3).

On the ISP +club site, the member enters an assigned club member numberas well as a given or personalized password prior to being able topurchase from any of the participating retailers, vendors, serviceorganizations, etc. The member can go to the ISP +Bronze Club membershippage, the ISP +Silver Club membership page, the ISP +Gold Clubmembership page or the ISP +Platinum Club membership page depending uponwhat club membership the individual held (see FIG. 1 for possiblemembership card type examples). In this particular scenario the membergoes to the ISP Gold Club membership page (see FIGS. 11, 12, 13 and 22for corporate logos, or see FIGS. 14, 15, 16 and 21 for item or areadescriptions and corporate listings).

The individual corporate logos can be selected by “clicking” on same toproceed to the individual corporation's ISP/corporate discount or superdiscount page(s). These logos can be fixed, flashing, moving, enlarging,etc. to draw the attention of the member. Also, additional informationcan be placed with the logos indicating such things as the latest datethat new items or services have been placed on the corporation'sdiscount or super discount pages (e.g., latest: Jun. 15, 2003, 30items), the date up to which certain discounts will be valid (e.g.,until: Jun. 20, 2003, 50% off) and/or a date and time of upcomingdiscounts (e.g., only: Jun. 22, 2003, noon-5 pm), etc. This helpsmembers to make certain informed judgments prior to actually going toany individual participating corporation's site.

Under the item or area descriptions one can select individual productsor services and “drop-down” boxes where the corporate names will appearfor selection purposes (see FIGS. 16 and 21). These individual names canbe then “clicked” on to proceed to the individual corporation'sISP/corporation discount or super discount page(s). The discount (e.g.,20% to 55% plus free shipping) and super discount (e.g., over 55% to 90%plus free shipping) pages (see FIGS. 17, 18 and 23) indicate the itemsor areas of discount. “Clicking” on one selection will bring up the itemand item description page (see FIGS. 19 and 24). “Clicking” on theindividual item selected will bring up the pricing/percent (%) off ofthe manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP) discount page (seeFIGS. 20 and 24).

The member can purchase the item or place any selection in a shoppingcart or basket for purchase or later elimination following reviewingother items for purchase. Items or services offered by the vendor,retailers, service providers, etc. can be for example even one-of-a-kindas opposed to having many available, the member can be offered topurchase more than one for an equal or greater discount, combined offersof items or services can also allow for a greater discount opportunity,out-of-stock items can be offered with a reorder time period indicated,similarly waitlist items can be offered also to be available within atime range, etc. To purchase the products and services, the member maypay the amount in full at the time of purchase, use a time payment planby paying a specified amount per month until the total is reached, payon a lay-away basis whereas the item or service is sent, picked-up oravailable when the full purchase price has accumulated, etc.

Members using the Internet could opt to pay using a credit card, check,money order, etc., whereas, members purchasing in a physical retailstore location and paying at a register can, in addition to theaforementioned, use cash. Members shopping in participating vendors'stores “automatically” would receive the same discount or super discountthat the vendors are offering on the Internet when the member shows andhas the ISP club membership card “swiped” at the time of purchase, evenif the member was not aware that the item to be purchased had theadditional discount available. This offering through the use of the ISP+club membership card truly integrates the virtual world of the Internetwith the physical world of the day-to-day reality.

After purchasing or just viewing the possible discount and superdiscount offers on the Internet site of a participating corporation, themember can go to the home page of the vendor to view other offeringsthat were available, continue searching through other vendors' sitesusing the method and system, go back to any previous site visited, go toother sites on the Internet, or log off the Internet.

Depending upon the embodiment, the ISP (and/or non-ISP)+club membershipcards can have a variety of characteristics in use, including thosewhich are associated with the level of the card (e.g., Bronze, Silver,Gold & Platinum or one level). This following discussion addresses, inadditional detail, exemplary actual physical club membership discountcard characteristics and merchant/member steps in operation/use for theabove-described method and system with club memberships for discountedbuying on the Internet and at store locations. In particular, thefollowing discussion continues in the presentation of certain exemplaryindividual aspects of the aforementioned method and system with clubmemberships relative to online/offline integration for thenational/international, retail/wholesale, products/services, discountedbuying marketplace:

The initial “gifted” or free ISP or non-ISP +club membership discountand super discount card would be Platinum, if multiple levels ratherthan one level of membership were decided to be offered. Including theoption of multiple levels, the club card could either be only a discountcard or both a discount as well as a payment card.

The first option (the “two-card approach”) is for the +club card to notalso serve as a payment card but rather only a discount and loyalty cardwhich can be used with or without other in-store discount cards, whichwould give additional and separate savings from those available with the+club card. Any item(s) then to be purchased with the discounts deductedby using this club membership card would then be paid for by a varietyof methods including credit or debit card (e.g., VISA, Master Card,American Express Card, Discover Card, Japan Credit Bureau, Diners ClubInternational, Debit Cards, etc.), check, money order or cash. FIGS.26-29 respectively show exemplary methods of payment, exemplary samplesof available credit and debit cards, exemplary business to businesscredit, and an exemplary VISA +Platinum card with or without a merchantdiscount card and methods of payment.

With the two-card approach, the discount card being separate from any ofthe aforementioned payment cards, any credit, debt or no cardholdercould get a +club card, for credit limitations are not applicable. Sincemultiple credit or debit cards, checks, money orders or cash can be usedfor purchases, the discount card can be used universally by the greatestnumber of purchasers.

The second option (the “one-card approach”) is for the +club card toserve as both a discount and a payment card. With the one-card approachthere is obviously one less card needed than with using the two-cardapproach. However, one must then be a credit or debit cardholder toobtain a +club discount card, making credit worthiness and limitsapplicable. Also, if the credit or debit card with which the +club cardis combined is “maxed out” or at its limit, the discount card portionwould automatically be void until the credit or debit limitation wasrectified. Numerous side-by-side 1-card versus 2-cardadvantages/disadvantages are shown on two Analysis Sheets using VISA asan example of a possible major organization to issue the +clubmemberships—VISA +club membership cards (for a VISA example, see FIGS.32 & 33).

A “magnetic strip” on the back of a card would be used similar to adebit card with a password or “pin” number or without a password like acredit card for verification of the authenticity of the +club card bybeing “swiped” in a card reader or with “pass” technology at the pointof sale or register offline in a physical store location(s) (for a VISAexample, see FIG. 31). When making a purchase online, one would enterthe card number via keystroke or using “accessory” card readerequipment, again with or without a password or “pin” number.Verification is necessary to prevent unauthorized use of a phonymanufactured facsimile card in an attempt to fraudulently avoid payingthe required +club membership fees. Also, the magnetic strip identifierallows the card to be voided at the end of a “free” or “paid” timeperiod, as well as when the card is reported by the legitimatecardholder to the +club member issuing corporation or financialinstitution to be misplaced or stolen. Cardholder purchasing habits canbe tracked through the magnetic strip and/or through the bar code asindicated below.

Following authenticity verification using the magnetic strip or “smart”chip, a “bar code” on the back of the card would be “scanned” (just aswhere in-store merchant discount cards with bar codes are scanned), toactivate any discounts available to the purchaser being a +club member.The +club memberships may come in one or more levels (Bronze, Silver,Gold & Platinum). With multiple levels, the bar codes would incorporatedifferent sets for each level. The in-store bar code on the individualin-store discount card would continue to give discounts just as they donow. Then, with multiple levels, the +Bronze Club card would not givethe regular in-store discounts but rather discounts other than thoseavailable with the individual in-store card. The +Silver Club card wouldgive the discounts available on the +Bronze Club card as well asadditional discounts. The +Gold Club card would give the discountsavailable on the +Bronze Club card and the +Silver Club card as well asadditional discounts. And finally, the +Platinum Club card would givediscounts available on the +Bronze Club card, the +Silver Club card andthe +Gold Club card as well as additional discounts (again, FIG. 31shows a VISA example). As aforementioned, additional loyalty rewards forthe individual cardholders would also be available via tracking,depending upon the purchasing price totals and/or volumes and/orchoices.

Prior to this method and system, the need did not exist to have multiplebar coded discount “group” levels read at any individual storelocations. While the separate identifying bar codes of the individualproducts are presently read at the register and any additional discountsfor the daily, weekly, etc. in-store special discounted items enteredinto the store system/back room operations are given to purchasers usingthe in-store discount card with its bar code. Since the present in-storecards are “free”, and since they only work within a particular store,while identifying products along with customer use through theindividualized bar codes for that customer, there was absolutely noreason to provide multiple levels of discounting requiring multiple barcoded discount “systems” within any individual store's operations.

The +club card “bar code(s)” will run on the same network as thein-store “bar code” discounts, but access different items and discountamounts. The additional “bar code(s)” (one or one for each level ifusing multiple level club cards) will be integrated into both theregister and the back room operations of the participating stores, usingthe same existing or similar compatible technology, dramaticallysimplifying the +club card implementation in both time and cost (again,FIG. 31 shows a VISA example).

The discounts and super discounts offered offline can be or will be thesame as those offered by the individual participating merchants online,for those offering both online and offline discounts, as shown on anInternet shopping web site(s), portal(s) or hub(s). This will be thefirst truly universal online/offline integration concept brought tofruition (see FIG. 34 for an in-store advertising example).

The +club cards can also incorporate the use of “smart” chip cardtechnology to track and store additional data allowing greaterflexibility in use, loyalty solution benefits and recording features(although, transferring information from the thousands of in-storediscount cards would never happen, not to mention that merchants usetheir in-store discount cards with their individual names as part oftheir advertising/marketing programs). This “smart” chip technology willbe able to incorporate the transfer of data from the Internet onlineofferings of participating merchants to their individual offline store'spoint of sale/register locations in “real time”—potentially being ableto replace the bar code requirement when and if desired by theparticipating merchants. In contrast, other data tracking and loyaltysolutions address tracking of purchases with “bulk” transfers once everytwenty-four (24) hours (see FIGS. 30, 32 and 33 for a VISA example).

However, “smart” cards require additional development and implementationrequirements, which are both timely and costly to member partnerfinancial institutions and to merchants wishing to integrate suchtechnology into existing operations (again, see FIGS. 30, 32 and 33 forthe VISA example). The initial and even continued future use of“magnetic strips” and “bar codes” would allow for immediateimplementation of the concept to include approximately 60% of theexisting merchants which address approximately 90% of theretail/wholesale marketplace. The “smart” technology can be integratedinto the concept as it is developed and implemented at each merchant'slocations with both required software and hardware considerations.

This concept is the first true Internet online/in-store offlineintegrated at point of sale (POS) registers in real time, marketing andsales, method and system for the discount purchasing of goods andservices. Universal preferred customer club membership cards, “YourShopping Companion”, are issued with club memberships. Examples ofnon-ISP providers that could be name identified on the club membershipcards are major banks and financial associations that issue creditand/or debit cards and/or reward cards and/or gift cards, etc. include,in alphabetical order, American Express, Bank of America (includes Fleetand MBNA), Capital One, Chase (includes Bank One), Citigroup, Discover,HSBC, Providian, Wells Fargo and US Bank as one embodiment of thepresent invention (See FIG. 35). Also, multi-level (Platinum, Gold,Silver & Bronze)+Club Cards are one additional embodiment of the presentinvention addressing different areas and valuations of purchasing (SeeFIG. 36). These card issuing institutions and associations presentlyhave records of consumer information as it relates the issuance ofpayment cards to their individual customers. This information will allowthese organizations to select a strong demographic of proven buyers fromtheir existing credit and debit cardholders to which they issue theinitial free temporary club membership cards to satisfy the criticalmass requirement of consumers desired by merchants and manufacturersparticipating in offering discounts to a large enough audience ofpotential buyers as part of the implementation procedure at start-up tolaunch the concept. Examples of potential advertising implementationliterature can be seen at FIG. 37, FIG. 38, FIG. 39, FIG. 40 and FIG.41.

The universal preferred customer club membership cards are preferablyonly discount cards and not also payment cards, actual purchases beingmade by credit cards, debit cards, reward cards, checks, money orders orcash. There will be no cost to the issuing institutions for the freetemporary discount cards or any of the marketing notices, flyers,venture advertising or mailings. The card issuing institutions willreceive a percentage of the annual +Club fees generated from paymentsfor the permanent discount cards for the marketing of club discountcards issued under their institution name. Also, these club discountcards provide a dual advertising venue by marketing the names of theissuing institutions along with the +Club memberships. These non-payment+Club cards will also enhance the use of the card issuing institutionspayment cards. Additionally, the card issuing institutions' paymentcards use can be further enhanced by the institutions offering reward orpercentage incentives to use the institution named +Club discount cardswith a similarly named institutional payment card.

The critical mass of venture start-up consumers (i.e.: 100 millionpresent credit card and debit card holders) selected by theaforementioned examples of major card issuing institutions andassociations would be sent temporary free fully activated clubmembership cards simultaneously at venture launch. These universal clubmembership discount cards will immediately allow these selectedconsumers to receive special discounts on products and services bothonline on the Internet and offline in stores at point of sale (POS)registers (i.e.: 5% to 50% off the MSRP) or super discounts (i.e.: 51%to 90% off the MSRP). Following a time period (i.e.: three months)temporary club members can purchase permanent annual memberships andreceive permanent discount cards, optionally paid for with a credit ordebit card in total or monthly. The magnetic strip identificationpermitting access to the discounts and bar coded discount systemtechnology will provide the consumer a record of the discount purchaseson their register receipts. Smart card technology along with radiofrequency identification (RFID) technology or pass technology are otherfuture possible card enhancements. Consumers can shop in stores or orderon the Internet and pick-up purchases at actual store locations if instock or to be shipped to the stores from remote locations if not instock for pick-up or request that Internet purchases be shipped to themdirectly

Examples of potential major merchant participants, in alphabeticalorder, include Ace Hardware, Banana Republic, Barnes & Noble, Bed Bath &Beyond, Best Buy, Blockbuster, Bloomingdale's, Borders Group, CircuitCity, GAP, The Home Depot, Ikea, JC Penney, Kmart, Kohl's,Linens-n-Things, Lowe's, Macy's, Marshall Field's, Marshalls, Menards,Nordstrom, Office Depot, Office Max, Old Navy, Pottery Barn, RadioShack, Sears, Staples, Target, TJ Maxx, Toys “R” Us, Walgreens,Wal*Mart, and Williams Sonoma. With merchants hosting +Club banner linkson their main Internet sites to allow consumers to view their +Clubdiscounts and/or super discounts area on the main +Club Internet site, areciprocal advertising venue is created actually advertising +Clubmemberships (See FIG. 42 & FIG. 43).

This vast multi-channel online/offline approach to marketing and sellingwill generate substantial additional revenue for merchants andmanufacturers as never before, multiplying consumer spending whiledriving in-store growth at brick-and-mortar locations. Approximately 96%of shopping takes place in the real or physical world in storelocations; whereas, approximately 4% of shopping occurs in the virtualworld on the Internet. Once in the actual store locations to make aplanned expenditure, according to statistical research, up to 60% of thetotal final purchases by consumers will consist of items other thanthose originally sought. Marketing to the enormous demographic of provenshoppers via the huge Internet site for no fees will be a uniqueopportunity for both merchants and manufacturers. Unlike typical adrevenue driven Internet providers (i.e.: Google, Yahoo, MSN, AOL, etc.),with the annual membership fee driven club venture, on the +ClubInternet portal site there will be no logo or name listing charges, noadvertising charges, no product or service offerings charges, no perclick charges, no percentage of final sale charges and no sitemanagement or operational charges. All base software, the integrationand its installation into the individual merchant's host systems of thefully electronic system at their point of sale (POS) registers will alsobe free to those merchants participating in the initial venture launchalong with an allowance to assist in developing their individual sitepages to appear on the main site. A manual coupon system for in-storediscounting at their registers is an option to the fully automatedelectronic system for merchants desiring same in a manner similar toservices as provided by organizations like E-centives.

Loyalty Software Specialists (i.e.: Catuity Incorporated, etc.) offeringmembership and reward card programs with their relationships with POSterminal manufactures, ECR manufactures, store system suppliers, cardassociations, integrators, card suppliers and manufacturers, etc. willparticipate in base software development and integration ofonline/offline data transfer in real time to point of sale (POS)registers of the individual and/or multiple host systems of theparticipating merchants.

Corporations offering enterprise software and IT services providingintegrated solutions and business consulting services (i.e.: IBM, EDS,Compuware, etc.) are some of the other participants in the ventureimplementation process addressing the enormous base software integrationrequirements into the numerous merchants' host systems at the multitudeof store locations.

Major merchant check-out cash register and equipment manufacturers (i.e:IBM (with a 60% dominant market share of the top 100 retailersworldwide), NCR, NCI, Dell, HP, etc.) with both their strongrelationships with merchants and manufacturers and presence at the pointof sale (POS) with in-store sales can enhance their existingrelationships by offering the individual merchants free participation inthe +Club offering while providing the needed assurance to the merchantsof the overall base software integration process within the closelyguarded secure individual and/or multiple host systems of thesemerchants already using their equipment while gaining financiallythrough their own participation.

ISP or Internet Search Engine providers (i.e.: Google, Yahoo, MSN,AskJeeves, AOL, etc.) with their relationships with merchants andmanufacturers via advertising, marketing and sales to their individualaudiences of consumers also can enhance these relationships with bothmerchants and manufacturers by offering free participation with +Club totheir individual corporate clients while gaining financially throughtheir own participation.

Internet shopping site operators and management services addressingonline marketing and loyalty programs directed to financial and retailcompanies (i.e.: Trilegiant Corporation (Cendant), IAC, etc.) with theirrelationships with merchants and manufacturers and Internet sales andmarketing offerings provide online shopping fundamentals experience.

Major call center operations within the United States and/or in othercountries will address the enormous customer relations requirementsassociated with such a large membership base and the necessaryamalgamation of participating corporations.

The concept incorporates an amalgamation of corporate entities todevelop, integrate, implement and service the method and system forparticipating retailers and manufacturers to offer discounts and superdiscounts on goods and services, both online and offline, to a proposedlarge initial number (e.g. 100,000,000) of club members—a targetedaudience of proven buying consumers (symbolically indicated by a sphere)not just Internet users, viewers, social networkers or garners (See FIG.44). Eleven (11) possible major card issuing financial institutions(e.g. seven (7) banks and four (4) associations) are proposed to providethe names of these initial consumers by selecting them from theirindividual lists of valued credit and debit cardholders. These cardissuers will be rewarded in areas relative to marketing their brandnames, expanded the use of their credit and debit cards and receivepercentages of the club membership fees for concept marketing servicesto their respective cardholders who become paying club members (See FIG.45). An initial group of major participating merchants (retailers) andmanufacturers (e.g. thirty-two) will provide the special selecteddiscounted and super discounted goods and services for purchase by theproposed club members, both online and offline. These retailers andmanufacturers will receive access to the large group of proven buyingclub members via a free marketing, advertising and sales portal (SeeFIG. 46). The proposed club organization, symbolically indicated by asmaller sphere along with implementers, integrators, Internet searchengine, suppliers and vendors (e.g. twenty-three) will support the clubmethod and system which uniquely combines the offerings of each of theabove participating organizations for the club members (See FIG. 47).The club goal is to offer, all from one site, special selected discountson products and services by many thousands of retailers andmanufacturers both online and offline in store locations worldwide.There will be no longer be the need for consumers to begin a product orservice search by attempting to individually look through the offeringsof a few of the thousands of separate retailer or manufacturer Internetsites or through a few of the hundreds of shopping or discount shoppingInternet sites to direct their shopping scenarios.

An organizational chart of participating entities involved in variousaspects of providing the club membership, universal marketing,advertising and sales method and system including the softwareapplication product providers (software and software developers, theapplication service provider and the IT infrastructure provider), theInternet search engine provider, the middleware providers (in-storeinfrastructure providers, in-store software providers and vendors andservice providers), the major credit and debit card manufacturers, thediscounted product providers (major card issuing banks and associations,major merchants and manufacturers) and consumers (See FIG. 48) shows thecategories of responsibility of the various participating corporations.

A participant, component and transactional overview graphic includingthe roles of retailers, card issuing banks and associations, serviceproviders, and consumers addressing product viewing through actualpurchase scenarios operationally in both physical store locations and onthe club member Internet web site (See FIG. 49) shows the operationalinterrelationships between the various corporations and the club membersalong with actual steps to purchase the discounted product offers, bothonline and offline.

Non-payment, bank name branded club membership cards offer uniquemarketing opportunities for card issuing financial institutions (banksand associations) along with the enhanced use of these card issuers'credit and debit cards (See FIG. 50). Shown are three (3) non-paymentdiscount access, bank name branded (e.g. Chase, Bank of America andCiti) universal preferred customer, platinum club membership cards to beused by club members when purchasing goods and services on the Internetonline and in stores offline, on the phone or using catalogs along withbenefits accrued for the card issuing financial institutions'participation in the method and system—all club cards optionallymarketed as “Your Shopping Companion”.

There can be many possible club card designs. Shown is an alternateexemplary club membership card front-face design (See FIG. 51) ascompared to card fronts shown in the prior submitted FIG. 31, bothfigures also showing an exemplary club card plus bronze, silver, goldand platinum magnet strip and barcode cards along with statements ofcard discounts—bronze for bronze discounts; silver for bronze and silverdiscounts; gold for bronze, silver and gold discounts; and platinum forbronze, silver, gold and platinum discounts.

Retail categories indicating potential products or services proposed tobe offered with discounted and super discounted pricing to club membersunder each of the four (4) club card types (e.g. Bronze—Books,magazines, music, videos/DVDs, Gifts and flowers), (e.g. Silver—Bronzeofferings plus cable, movies, tickets, toys/games, restaurants andfood/cooking), (e.g. Gold—Bronze and Silver offerings plus ISPbroadband, computers, electronic equipment, jewelry/watches, sportequipment, clothing/shoes/purses, pharmaceuticals, health, officesupplies, movies (pay-per-view) and cameras) and (e.g. Platinum—Bronze,Silver and Gold offerings plus appliances, hotels, airfare, cruises,auto rental, cell phones, events (pay-per-view), furniture (home andoffice), automobiles, insurance and moving) (See FIG. 52) similar tothose shown in the prior submitted FIG. 2, FIG. 3, FIG. 14 and FIG. 15.

As indicated in FIG. 51, there are many possible club card designs. FIG.53 shows an alternate exemplary club membership card front-face designas compared to card fronts shown in the prior submitted FIG. 29, bothfigures also showing exemplary club membership cards used with creditcards, debit cards, discount cards and other payment types (P)—as theclub cards are typically non-payment instruments with the credit cards,debit cards, merchant cards, gift cards, checks, money orders or cashbeing the actual payment instruments.

The additional branding and marketing opportunity for the host Internetsearch engine provider (e.g. Yahoo!) provided by the club membershipcards, separate from that of either the club or the card issuinginstitutions, can be realized through both color representation like apurple band on the card face and the hosts name and/or logo on the cardback (See FIG. 54).

The credit and/or debit card issuer loyalty reward programs typicallyoffer bonus points on qualifying purchases redeemable with selectedmerchandise, by check or gift card or the earning of 1% cash back on allpurchases or 2% rebate on eligible gas, travel and dining purchases thebenefits accruing to the holders account up to eight weeks afteroriginal purchase; whereas, the club can offer substantially greaterbenefits of from 5% to 90% off manufacturers suggested retail prices,immediately at the time of purchase, on products and services asspecially selected by participating merchants and manufacturers, aswould be available to club members using the one universal preferredcustomer club discount access, non-payment card approach (See FIG. 55).

The accumulation of loyalty/rewards with typically offered programs bycredit and/or debit card issuers, including banks, associations andmerchants, using issuer paid, merchant paid or a combination of issuerand merchant paid points or cash back approaches as compared with theuniversal non-payment club approach shows that due to a variety ofpayment cards available, the card holder is penalized if using more thanone card to obtain maximum reward benefits. Each separate card accountsfor any reward point or cash back separate from any other and the totalsare separate and applied to each card individually, not collectivelybetween cards, for any respective card paid purchases. Whereas, the clubcard can work universally with all participating merchants and inconjunction with all payment types, including credit cards, debit cards,reward cards, gift cards, checks, money orders or cash, letting theholder to accumulate combined totals in the multiple venues along withrewarding and documenting loyalty immediately at the time of eachpurchase, not weeks or months later requiring diligent holder follow-upto assure that the savings have been credited to each respective account(See FIG. 56).

Free temporary universal platinum club membership cards name branded byeleven (11) card separate issuing financial institutions (e.g. Listedalphabetically: American Express, Bank of America, CapitalOne, Chase,Citi, Discover, HSBC, MasterCard, US Bank, Visa, and Wells Fargo) alongwith the proposed number of these club membership cards, determined bythe club, to be issued by each bank or association out of the initialproposed one hundred million temporary club cards at method and systemlaunch can be based upon the issuing institutions' individual marketshares of the total issued and presently active credit card and debitcard accounts (See FIG. 57). Individual card issuers can opt to issuemore of their own name branded club cards that their individual allottednumber, but at their own expense.

A sequential text diagram compares Internet online and in-store offlineshopping scenarios for both club members and non-club members fromproduct viewing to product purchasing (See FIG. 58). Retailers andmanufacturers will be able to market and sell to the large clubmembership for “free” on the club Internet web site shopping portal,offering special selected discounts on both products and services. Theseofferings will be viewed online and then purchased either online or inphysical store locations. Driving consumers into their brick and mortarlocations to buy is the preferred desire of retailers.

In-store club member consumer's register receipts will show products,the club membership discounts and the total savings or products, theclub membership discounts along with both additional separate retailerand card issuer discounts applied and the total savings on thepurchase—as product, price and discount data relative to theparticipating retailers' offerings, shown on the club Internet site, areelectronically transferred in real-time to the point-of-sale (POS)electronic sash registers (ECR's) of the individual retailers (See FIG.59).

The club monthly activity and savings summary report shown indicates anindividual member's product or service purchases by date, merchant andmanufacturer, products, retail price, club price, percent saved, amountsaved and dates of purchase for all purchases along with daily, monthlyand yearly totals of retail prices, club prices and club discountsavings to date, which can then be compared to the annual clubmembership fee to understand the actual net savings received up to thatpoint in time. Members can also perform other club actions from thispage like reviewing/updating their individual club profile, shop alldepartments, return to the club shopping home page, submit amerchant/manufacturer/product/service rating report, enter a message onthe club social network message board forum, view/rate onlineadvertising videos, enter a search request, ask a question, etc. (SeeFIG. 60).

Along with advertising videos, club members will be able to rate andmake comments relative to individual merchants, manufacturers, productsand services (See FIG. 61). This advertising related social networkingaspect in conjunction with the professional and amateur advertisingvideo submitting, rating and commenting social networking approach areat the core of the club merchant and manufacturer directed marketing,advertising and sales concept. The results of these ratings, both goodand poor, by club members will be shared with the respective retailer ormanufacturer, so they can understand how their buying consumers viewtheir individual offerings and will allow the retailers andmanufacturers to improve any deficiencies and retain good practice tohelp hold existing customers and to garner new ones. This is in directcontrast with the typical present social networking site offerings whichare based on the adjunct incorporation of advertising within, bydefinition, personal communication/sharing, ad disassociated businessmodels, thereby having to be tentative, even fearing to alienate theirmembers with a too aggressive or disruptive ad approach while convincingmerchants and manufacturers that the return on their offerings in suchan environment is worth the cost of participation. Whereas, the entirefoundation of the club is an online/offline method and system,marketing, advertising and sales venue is intended to be “free” toparticipating merchants and manufacturers who will provide information,financial and socially interactive benefits to paying club consumermembers—a huge demographic of proven buyers not just a large diversegroup of people interested in communicating and sharing specificpersonal information with their friends and associates, their intendedparticipation, by definition, being unrelated to making product andservice purchases of any kind. Due to the intention of club being anannual membership fee driven revenue approach instead of being anadvertising fee driven revenue approach as with the other presentofferings, with the possible exceptions for unique or specialadvertising venues, merchants and manufacturers participating on theclub Internet web site shopping portal will be assessed no logo or namelisting charges, no advertising charges, no product or service offeringscharges, no per “click” charges, no cost-per-action charges, nopercentage of final sales charges and no site management or operationalcharges. This also is diametrically opposite to the present conventionalwisdom approach of today.

The club member social networking forum for general club memberdiscussion will allow for individual member comments, recommendation andgeneral communication on a wide variety of subjects including theserelative to buying and selling such as products, brands, services,videos, ads, discounts, manufacturers, retailers and the club itself,plus upcoming/prior sale events, club activities along with the ratings,posting times and dates, number of replies and number of views, allplaced for other members response and/or information (See FIG. 62). Thisis an important social networking aspect in a spread sheet formatallowing for club members to truly interact with each other in an opencomment, response, rating venue, addressing all areas of their shoppingexperience.

Logos of some proposed participating retailers are shown along with alisting of some of the proposed free Internet advertising and marketingbenefits accruable to retailers and manufacturers participating in theclub method and system including no logo or name listing charges, noadvertising charges, no key word charges, no product or serviceofferings charges, no per “click” charges, no cost-per-action charges,no percentage of final sales charges and no site management oroperational charges (See FIG. 63).

The club Internet web site shopping portal Home Page is shown with clubmember information, coveted advertiser presentation locations, and clubmember number/password sign-in format card allowing the members toreceive the merchant and manufacturer discounts and super discounts,along with optionally offering an additional incentive to signing in,for that by doing so would automatically, once per day, generateindividual member entries for monthly drawings to award member prizes.All shopping departments are indexed at the left margin to allow forease in immediately accessing the specific areas of interest for theclub members. Specially rewarded merchants selected by the club forbeing among the best in discount offerings participation (e.g. JC Penneyand Kohl's) are given prime club home page advertising video placement.One can “click” on these videos for viewing, one can “click” to see thismerchant's additional ad videos and one can “click” to see a club pagelisting all of the present participating merchants' and manufacturers'ad videos. This start page also continues down to additional clubselected merchants' and manufacturers' names/logos (See FIG. 65), whichwhen “clicked” on link to the club's individual participating merchant'sand manufacturer's special discount and super discount pages along withother product and service discounting information seen in full. Thisvideo ad method and system, marketing and advertising platform presentsa unique social networking aspect directed to a proven demographic ofbuyers both club members and non-club members interested in products andservices offered by merchants and manufacturers. This alternative can becompared to that shown in the prior submitted FIG. 10, which shows anexemplary (AOL.com) Internet home page with a club membernumber/password sign-in (P) and to the shopping department indexing ascompared to that shown in prior FIG. 14 and FIG. 15.

The club discount and super discount participating corporate retailerand manufacturer logos page, selected by the club for their generous andconsistent product and service discounted offerings provided to clubmembers, will be rewarded with prominent positions surrounding acircular club membership/card information access link with full Internetscreen (See FIG. 65), as compared with that shown in the prior submittedFIG. 13, which shows an exemplary (AOLTW) D & SD corporate logos pagewith full Internet screen (P). Clicking on these logo will give onedirect access to the individual retailer's or manufacturer's productsand services discounted for club members;

The club Internet Home Page as seen in FIG. 64 shows the additionalshopping department indexing detail listing (e.g. Health & Beauty) (SeeFIG. 66). Each of these areas can also have further indexed detaillistings to direct a member to a specific area of interest as comparedto the additional detailed indexing shown in prior FIG. 16 and FIG. 21.

A Men's Grooming page can be arrived at by first selecting Health &Beauty along with Hair Care in FIG. 66, showing six (6) differentelectric razors, five of which are discounted and available at retailers(e.g. Wal*Mart, Kohl's & Target) and one which is discounted andavailable directly from a manufacturer (e.g. Remington) (See FIG. 67).

A manufacturer page (e.g. Remington), can be arrived at by a “click” onRemington in FIG. 67, showing a discounted electric razor along with aproduct description and pricing information (See FIG. 68). This willallow manufacturers to sell directly to the public, bypassing retailers.

The participating club merchants and manufacturers will also bemarketing and advertising on the host's search engine sites (e.g.Microsoft) in banner and text formats to be eligible for greaterprominent placement exposure gifted by the host for marketing,advertising and sales access to the club site and its large buyingmembership audience (FIG. 69). The shows an exemplary Microsoft Bingsearch engine results page advertising by retailers along with clubdiscounts under two areas of sponsored results for Women's Clothing(Shop and find all brands of Women's Clothing at discounted prices) andShop Women's Clothing (Shop all Styles and Brands in Ladies Fashion atDiscounted Prices), both at http://www.plusclubinternational.com.

The club shopping page illustrated indicates a special placement ofmerchants by those shown advertising on one of the host's shopping pagesbeing rewarded by being given additional prominence in the club venue(See FIG. 70). This shopping page (e.g. Women's Clothing) shown as beinghosted by an Internet search engine (e.g. Microsoft's Bing) with six (6)merchants given a free listing “gifted” by the club and the Internetsearch engine provider for retailers and manufacturers with possibleoptional requirements including that, in turn, the determination fornames/logos positioning placement within the club portal be decided inpart by the consistency of the retailers and manufactures in placingdiscounts and super discounts for the club members, and to a lesserdegree, along with their placing paid advertising on the host Internetsearch engine provider's (e.g. Microsoft) main Internet venue(s);however, in the latter case, required only if the individual retailersand manufacturers place paid advertise on other competitive major searchengine providers' venues (e.g. Google, Yahoo, Ask or AOL).

A club Internet merchant (e.g. Target) page, arrived at by a “click” onTarget on FIG. 70, offering a discounted product (e.g. V-Neck Dress) toclub members describing the product and indicating savings andinstructions to purchase, headed with a club banner and Internet searchengine provider (e.g. Microsoft's Bing) (See FIG. 71).

Merchants and manufacturers presently have Internet web sites promotingtheir organizations, products and services. Each of these sites has aHome Page that acts as a directory from which viewers can accessdifferent pages and areas within their web sites. The club would have aclub Internet web site banner link on merchant's or manufacturer'sInternet Site Home Pages (e.g. Target) showing the Internet searchengine provider (e.g. Microsoft's Bing) (See FIG. 72). A “click” on thisbanner would take one to the merchant's present specially selected clubproduct or service discounts and super discounts, viewable by clubmembers and non-club members, but only offered to club members. Usingthis link one can then only return to this merchant's site and not tothe sites showing other merchants' club product or service discounts.This feature prevents other competing merchants or manufacturers fromusing the club to pull viewers away from the initial merchant ormanufacturer who has allowed the club banner link to be placed on theirhome page. This is compared to those retailer examples shown in theprior submitted FIG. 23 (e.g. Sears), FIG. 42 (e.g. Sears) and FIG. 43(e.g. The Home Depot) as individual retailer home pages. However,viewers can address all of the other merchants' and manufacturers'Internet web sites when the viewer initially accesses the club Internetweb site directly through the club Internet home page—be it by enteringit via the club web site address on their own or by being linked to theclub home page from other search, text or banner links on the Internet.

A retailer's (e.g. Target) women's dress page is shown with four (4)dress offers along with club discounts off the retail price and with thepercentage saved (See FIG. 73).

One of many manufacturers (e.g. Proctor & Gamble, P&G) Internet Beauty &Grooming site pages is shown listing their brands. The inclusion of clublogos placed at the individual brands would be one optional method toindicate those brands providing product discounts for the club'smembers, selling directly to the public, bypassing retailers (See FIG.74).

The typical tracking of merchants' and manufacturers' advertisingeffectiveness presently offered by Internet search engine provideradvertising approaches is seriously lacking in providing advertisers theneeded information to make informed decisions relative to ads as well asad placement. Not only are the ads and ad information presently Internetbased, which according to industry statistics accounts for only 6% ofactual product and service purchases as compared to 94% of purchasesbeing made in real world environments like brick-and-mortar storelocations, many questions such as: Where exactly their ad will getplaced?, Why exactly they shut them down?, What are the network-level adperformance figures?, How overall click rates have changed over time?,Who clicked on the ads?, What leads to higher placement among ads?, Howdoes one evaluate the quality of a text ad?. From what countries do theusers come?, On what basis are publishers paid? and What is the researchon ad effectiveness? are either not fully addressed or not addressed atall. In a stark contrast, the method and system, marketing, advertisingand sales approach of this applicant provides the tracking of Internetviewing by club members of merchants' and manufacturers' discountedproduct and service offerings along with being able to then relate thatactivity to actual purchases of products and services both on theInternet as well as at point-of-sale checkout registers in physicalbrick-and-mortar store locations that will be used by the memberconsumers. This unparalleled tracking capabilities of club members'shopping interests and actions, will be possible through the use of clubmember numbers and passwords, which the members will enter on the clubInternet Home Page sign-in card, allowing retailers to judge the trueeffectiveness of their Internet marketing and advertising offers byfollowing individual club member's viewing of specific retailer (e.g.Target) products on the Internet and then seeing those same productsbeing purchased by that individual club member in that specificretailer's physical store location—or in some cases, even in acompetitive retailer's store location. This tracking aspect will allowfor fact based analysis as opposed to the more arbitrary typical datacollection via cookies, search queries, ad words, text and display adsor the number of “clicks” on any given offerings. Such tracking will beable to inform the merchants and manufacturers of the true effectivenessof their marketing and advertising programs resulting in actual sales(See FIG. 75). The use of an all encompassing Internet web site shoppingportal concept incorporating marketing, advertising and sales in onelocation as opposed to arbitrary or selective text, word, banner adplacement throughout arbitrary Internet pages answers many of theaforementioned concerns and invites buyers to peruse merchants' andmanufacturers' offerings worldwide with one site access, creatingconvenience and time savings along with the product and service discountand super discount offerings. The individual buyer profile informationdata relating consumer Internet product and service viewing to theresulting actual purchases both online and offline developed via thisconcept is available no where else and will be truly invaluable tomerchants and manufacturers when developing and budgeting ad programs togarner the best return on their creative efforts and advertising dollarexpenditures. To be able to finally track advertising and resultingpurchasing both virtually and in the real world.

A listing of all participating merchants and manufacturers who havesubmitted advertising videos for viewing, either or both professionallyor amateur prepared, will be shown on the club merchant and manufacturerselection advertising video Internet web site page (See FIG. 76).Participating club merchants' (e.g. Best Buy, Target, Staples, The HomeDepot, GAP and JC Penney) selections of advertising videos Internet website page. Each participating merchant indicates the number ofprofessional videos (e.g. 4P), amateur videos (e.g. 2A) and amateur HaulVideos along with permitting amateurs to submit ads they have created tothe individual merchants for their review and determination of whetherthat merchant desires to then post those amateur video ads on this sitefor viewing by club members and non-club members; however, only clubmembers can rate and comment on both the professional and amateurvideos. A selected amateur ad video will garner its creator a financialreward and will be shown on the individual merchant's or manufacturer'sclub video ad site as well as on television, should it be considered bythe merchant or manufacturer to be of that quality. This gives amateursa unique opportunity to display their talents as well as provides asocial networking venue directly focused on product and service,marketing and advertising.

“Click” on a merchant's or manufacturer's name and you would go to thatmerchant's or manufacturer's ad video selection page. The clubindividual merchant's (e.g. J C Penney) or manufacturer's professional(e.g. 4P) and amateur (e.g. 1A) advertising video and Haul videosselection page showing what the ad videos are about, the length of thevideos, the number of views, the number of ratings along with one tofour stars for video quality and popularity (See FIG. 77).

“Click” on the video and you would go to the video-viewing page. Theclub Internet web site merchant's or manufacturer's advertising videoviewing page allows both club members and non-club members to view theads, but only club members can rate the videos as excellent, good, fairor poor, after entering the club member's number for identification—therunning totals for each of these ratings are indicated (See FIG. 78). Asbefore, the subject matter of the video, the number of views and thenumber of ratings are shown. Also, a club member may comment on thevideo as well as view the comments of others. Submitting a rating on avideo, only one rating per club member per ad, allows a club member tobe part of a drawing on a specified date shown for a chance to winmonetary, product or additional product or service discount rewardsprovided by the relative merchant or manufacturer.

Three (3) possible areas for marketing of the Internet search engineprovider (e.g. Microsoft's Bing), the card issuing banks (e.g.CapitalOne), individual retailers (e.g. Target) or manufacturers and theclub itself both online by way of the club Internet home page, on theretailers' Internet home pages and offline on the front or back of theclub membership cards (See FIG. 79).

The club method and system provides a platform for marketing,advertising and sales by merchants and manufacturers both nationally andinternationally. Merchants and manufacturers from counties other thanthe United States can participate in offering their products and/orservices on the Universal Preferred Customer +Club InternationalInternet Web Site Shopping Portal. Through the use of bonded warehousesand/or distributions centers located within the United States or withinother countries from their individual consumers, merchants andmanufacturers will be able to have a ready inventory of products ormerchandise on hand enabling both these merchants and manufacturers tosell directly to club member buyers, optionally bypassing the retailstore, third party sales environment, and give timely delivery of thepurchased products or merchandise to be picked up at warehouses anddistribution centers by the customers or have the purchased product ormerchandise delivered to the addresses of the buyers' choosing.Merchants and manufacturers will be able to then gain access to newmarkets without the extended time frames and costly approaches requiredin setting up their individual products or merchandise sales initiativeswith each individual retailer and stocking each location as isnecessitated with the typical third-party sales concept. The clubconcept literally provides the largest worldwide virtual/real-worldshopping mall ever, yet each merchant and manufacturer being able tooperate totally remote from their consumers.

It is specifically intended that the present invention not be limited tothe embodiments and illustrations contained herein, but include modifiedforms of those embodiments including portions of the embodiments andcombinations of elements of different embodiments as come within thescope of the following claims.

We claim:
 1. A computer implemented method of buying and selling usingclub memberships as a basis for buyers to receive discounts on purchasesof products offered by sellers, the method comprising: receiving, at aretail store, at least one product or service to be purchased by a user;scanning, by a point of sale terminal, a club membership card associatedwith a previously purchased tiered-subscription by the user;transmitting, by the point of sale terminal to a web server accountassociated with the scanned club membership card, purchase dataincluding identification of the at least one product or service to bepurchased by a user; determining, at the web server, whether thetransmitted purchase data matches one or more discounts or promotionsthat are currently offered and displayed products or services on the webpage associated with the scanned club membership card; wherein the oneor more discounts or promotions that are currently offered and displayedproducts or services on the web page associated with the scanned clubmembership card is dependent on a tier of the scanned membership card;transmitting, by the web server to the point of sale terminal, thepreviously purchased discounts or promotions that match the at least oneproduct or service to be purchased by a user; applying by the point ofsale terminal, the discounts displayed on web page associated with thescanned club membership card to the price of the at least one product orservice to be purchased from the user; and receiving, by the point ofsale terminal, payment for the at least one product or service from theuser minus the discount applied using the scanned membership card. 2.The method of claim 1, further including in response to viewing at leastone of the discounted product offers from the sellers participating onthe club Internet web site, the buyers can choose to make purchasesonline using buyer discount club membership card authorizations andidentifying numbers along with payment instruments following securebuying procedures including optional benefits of free shipping whenprovided by the shippers or picking up purchased products at storelocations, or at bonded warehouse/distribution centers, or use clubmember Internet site product discount information as shopping planningguide information, go to physical store locations of the sellers to makethe purchases offline based upon the discounted product offers asadvertised online, and immediately take the purchased products or havethe purchased products shipped, free when provided by the sellers, dueto size, weight or other considerations; further comprising computersand computer networks and systems running software programselectronically transmitting seller product discount data from theInternet to points of sale at seller checkout registers in the physicalstore locations; wherein, at the physical store locations, the buyers byusing universal club membership cards accepted by the participatingsellers, which are magnetic strip authorized and bar coded by scanningor using pass or mobile technology, to access the transmitted sellerproduct discount data electronically, and wherein the seller product anddiscount data pertaining to the purchased products is automaticallyindicated on buyers' register receipts of purchase, along with annualsavings to date, the seller product and discount data providing savingsdata for both total savings from the seller providing the purchasedproduct and total savings from all sellers having provided discounts tothe member and compiled into separate individual buyer's activityreports for club members showing each buying activity along with runningtotals of purchases and the discount savings by day, month and year todate so the buyer can compare the actual savings with the annual clubmembership fee amount; wherein, while on the Internet club members canpurchase products worldwide directly from retailers, the club memberscan also purchase products worldwide directly from manufacturers,bypassing the retailers, and have items shipped directly, free or at acost as offered by the individual manufacturers, or the members can pickup items at individual manufacturers' outlets or at specific bondedwarehouses or distribution centers storing individual or multiplemanufacturers' products; and stored in memory on and separate from theInternet host system is the overall club Internet site informationincluding individual seller Internet discount product information alongwith individual member buyer Internet club site viewing information andInternet online and in-store offline as well as telephone productpurchase information allowing tracking of these activities forparticipating sellers to address, in an informed manner, marketing andadvertising effectiveness and subsequent advertising budgetingrequirements.
 3. The method of claim 1, further characterized in thatthe club memberships are multi-tier allowing for different product typesto be discounted dependent upon the club memberships, and additionallycharacterized in that each successive higher tier offers additionalproduct types to be discounted along with discounted product types thatare offered by the tiers below successive higher tiers.
 4. The method ofclaim 1, further characterized in that while the membership cards are tobe considered to be universal discount cards by offering access todiscounting by a plurality of the sellers, the membership cards are notintended to be replacements for individual seller in-store discountcards but rather are additional to and intended to work in concert withthe in-store discount cards.
 5. The method of claim 1, furthercharacterized in that the buyers can be credited for discounted productsat brick-and-mortar store locations of the sellers in a semi-automaticmethod, which does not require integration of multiple level discountingsoftware into the electronic host networks and systems of the sellers,entailing the seller using separate product discount sheets with barcodes which the seller would electronically scan, by the seller usingcoupons which the seller would electronically scan or by the sellermanually entering product discount amounts at and with sellers' POSterminals and electronic cash registers.
 6. The method of claim 1,further characterized in that the discounted product offers by thesellers to the buyers can be indicated to be valid only at specifictimes including at least one of on specific dates and during timeperiods selected from the group consisting of never-ending time periods,monthly time periods, weekly time periods, daily time periods and hourlytime periods.
 7. The method of claim 1, further characterized as a newmarketing and advertising communication venue for sellers to attract thevery large club membership audience of buyers drawn through a brandnamed club and grow multi-channel purchasing by offering special productdiscounted money and time saving opportunities for the buyers andthereby expanding marketing and payment roles for financial institutioncard services, bringing online and offline communications and salestogether with financial elements and by providing a venue to rate and/orcomment on professional and amateur produced ad and haul videos as wellas on individual discount product offerings; wherein, club members canpartake in a forum or social networking venue aspect addressingparticipating sellers' marketing, advertising and selling offeringswhile giving sellers an opportunity to gage their approaches; wherein,club members can dialog directly with sellers, and rate, comment andmake suggestions relative to individual sellers' products, brands,videos and service along with occasionally receiving special rewardsdirectly for a submittal or via a drawing for specific prizes whenoffered by the club and the sellers; and wherein, club members cancreate personal membership profiles to be used while addressing onlineclub activities.
 8. The method of claim 1, further characterized thatwhile the club membership card is intended as a discount access cardonly, not a payment card, both discount and payment on one card is anoption.
 9. The method of claim 1, further characterized in that type ofpayments for products is flexible and can be made by credit card (withor without rewards), debit card (with or without rewards), individualseller (merchant) card (with or without rewards), gift card, rewardcard, coupons, points redemption, check card, check, money order orcash.
 10. The method of claim 1, further characterized in that purchasescan be paid in full, monthly payments until paid in full or layaway,being sent or picked up when paid in full.
 11. The method of claim 1,further characterized in that products can be purchased as individualproducts, more than one of a product, combined or component products,out-of-stock products or waitlist products, and in that productspurchased on the Internet can be shipped, shipped free when provided bythe sellers or picked up at physical store locations.
 12. The method ofclaim 1, further characterized in that along with the name of the clubitself, individual financial institutions can be identified as theissuers of the club membership cards with their name and logo appearingon a face of the cards; wherein, having the club membership cards bankor association name branded dually markets both the club and theindividual bank or association; wherein, temporary club cards can bedistributed by the club free to the banks and associations, the cards toeach individual entity being based upon the institutions' percent oftotal market share of active credit cards and debit cards; wherein, inaddition to club participation expanding the use of bank and associationcredit cards and debit cards, the individual banks and associations canoffer additional individual credit card and debit card use incentives tobuyers when paying for purchases with their name branded cards and alsowhen a buyer uses a club card with the same bank name as the credit cardor debit card at the time of purchase; and wherein, the club can paythese institutions a percentage of the annual club membership fees forthe banks' and associations' marketing of the club.
 13. The method ofclaim 1, further characterized in that while a club member's name canappear on an initial free temporary card front, the name of a clubmember would appear on the front of the permanent paid membership card,which can be renewed annually for a fee, along with a member number andother identifying information and data.
 14. A club membership productdiscounting system in which sellers market, advertise and sell discountproduct offers to buyers for purchase through an integration of onlineand offline channels, the system comprising: means for hosting, managingand operating a club membership Internet web site on which the sellerscan market and advertise the discount product otters to the buyersthrough links to discount pages from at least one of seller logos andseller names; means for sellers to feature professional and amateurproduced ad and haul videos including individual discount productofferings; means for buyer club members to rate and comment on sellers,sellers' brands, sellers products, sellers' videos and sellers' service,and can, in some instances, receive rewards or win prizes in periodicdrawings for such submittals from sellers or the club; means forindicating additional important temporal product information at theseller logos prior to receiving commands from the buyers to link to thediscount pages; means for allowing the sellers to add, remove and revisedata on the discount pages associated with the sellers; means forlinking to main web sites of the sellers from the discount pages; meansfor allowing the buyers to purchase discounted products online securely;and means for transmitting discounted product data electronically fromthe hosting means to seller in-store checkout registers.
 15. The clubmembership product discounting system of claim 14, being furthercharacterized by: first means for allowing in-store use of clubmembership cards that each include a magnetic strip as an authorizationidentifier when the card is swiped electronically at times of purchase;second means for allowing the in-store use of the club membership cardsincluding a bar code to activate a discount product tier automaticallywhen scanned electronically before, during or after the other productbar code scanning or amount entering at checkout prior to the finaltotal for the purchase; means that seller offered club membershipdiscounts on items purchased are automatically entered electronicallyvia the in-store host system at the checkout registers, appearing on thebuyers register receipt; means that the club membership cards canincorporate smart card chip technology; means that the club membershipcards can incorporate pass card technology; and means that the clubmemberships can incorporate mobile technology.
 16. The club membershipproduct discounting system of claim 14, wherein the point of salein-store host systems at the registers of sellers through theimplementation of an integrated software program can accommodateadditional levels of discounting over and above the single level freeseller discounts as offered by individual in-store discount cards. 17.The club membership product discounting system of claim 14, wherein themultiple level discount software programs can be integrated within-store systems remotely on a batch basis throughout the entire systemor systems for all store locations in the operation of a seller,remotely but on an individual store basis or at the actual storelocations.
 18. The club membership product discounting system of claim14, wherein multi-tier club membership levels are recognizedelectronically to offer additional types of discounted products thanlesser tier club memberships along with the discount product offeringsof the lesser tier club memberships.
 19. The club membership productdiscounting system of claim 14, wherein the overall club Internet siteinformation including individual seller Internet discount productinformation along with individual member buyer Internet club siteviewing information and Internet online and in-store offline as well astelephone product purchase information allowing the complete tracking ofthese activities for participating sellers to address in an informedmanner, marketing and advertising effectiveness and subsequentadvertising budgeting requirements is stored in memory on and separatefrom the Internet host system.
 20. The club membership productdiscounting system of claim 14, wherein individual seller productdiscount page data and data revisions are stored within individualseller computer systems with communication interfaces to the Internet,and wherein in-store back room operations of host systems offering onelevel of free in-store discounts through the use of individual in-storediscount cards can operate in a similar manner but on additional levelsinterfacing electronically with the Internet product discounts theyoffer to buyers on the club membership web site.
 21. The method of claim1, wherein, the sellers, with computers and computer networks andsystems running software programs along with their host networks andsystems, can market, advertise and sell their discounted products to thebuyers via the club Internet web site without payment of listingcharges, per click charges, keyword charges, cost per action charges andpercentage of final sale charges, for the club revenue is substantiallyderived from buyer-paid memberships, not seller-paid advertising.